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nitrogen narcosis

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nitrogen narcosis

 or nitrogen euphoria or raptures of the deep

Effects of breathing nitrogen under increased pressure. In divers breathing compressed air, nitrogen saturates the nervous system, causing an intoxicating light-headed, numb feeling, then slowed reasoning and dexterity, and then emotional instability and irrationality. Severe cases progress to convulsions and blackout. Susceptibility varies, and severity increases with depth, but there are no aftereffects. Physical function remains normal, and divers may be unaware of the growing irrationality that can cause them to rise too fast (see decompression sickness) or let their air supply run out. Helium, which dissolves less easily in body tissues, is substituted for nitrogen for deep dives.


nitrogen narcosis [′nī·trə·jən när′kō·səs]
(medicine)
Narcosis caused by gaseous nitrogen at high pressure in the blood; produced in divers breathing air at depths of 100 feet (30 meters) or more. Also known as rapture of the deep.


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Without getting cold and wet, readers can sense what it must be like to go that far beyond the normal 130-foot limit of sport diving, a depth where nitrogen narcosis can trigger hallucinatory episodes or, worse, a panic attack, in total darkness.
He reminded us about nitrogen narcosis and the need to watch our dive time carefully.
One of the unfortunate side-effects of saturation diving is nitrogen narcosis, which Edmunds described as feeling like a constant ``two-beer buzz,'' making it difficult to concentrate and plan.
 
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