The onset of pain in my left ear was sudden and excruciating. I knew something was wrong, so I gripped the anchor line and stopped ascending. My buddy saw me stop, and I communicated via hand signals that something was not right with my ear and that I needed to pause our ascent. I waited for a few seconds and thought the pain was subsiding, so we started up once more. The pain immediately hit me again.
I signaled to my buddy that something was wrong and that I needed to descend again. My brain kicked into emergency mode, and time seemed to slow down. I could feel the adrenaline surge and my heart rate increase. The pain subsided when we dropped down a few feet. At this point I knew from my training that I was dealing with a reverse block, although I had never experienced one in my several years of diving.
As with most potentially dangerous situations, the first step toward safety is to take stock of the circumstances. I signaled to my buddy that I was going to level off and spend a few minutes on the anchor line. I checked my gauges, did some quick mental math, and figured out I had enough gas to hang at this depth for another 15 minutes.
I closed my eyes momentarily, concentrating on my breathing and the ocean’s sounds. “I’m OK,” I told myself. As my heart rate slowed, I began to think through the dive. Nothing unusual had occurred. It was the end of our last dive of the weekend, and we made it very relaxed, even calling it shorter than normal because we were satisfied with the trip and our dives on this wreck.
We had planned our dive for the depth, conditions, equipment, and individual surface air consumption (SAC) rates and adjusted maximum dive time based on our previous dives that weekend, leaving a generous safety margin in our tanks. There was no need to push our limits, and we felt like it was a perfect way to end a great weekend of diving.
After a couple of minutes, I began to slowly make my way up the anchor line. The pressure in my ear would periodically begin again, and each time I paused long enough for it to clear. That ascent felt like an eternity, but I watched my gauges and knew I was in good shape. Eventually, I reached the hang line and leveled off again at 15 feet (4.6 meters). We had not pushed ourselves into a decompression dive, but as a matter of habit we performed a precautionary safety stop before ascending the rest of the way.
I was grateful for my training. This dive could have ended with me experiencing severe barotrauma and potentially rupturing my eardrum (or worse) had we not accounted for our SAC rates as well as contingency reserves. I had plenty of time on the ascent to think about how fortunate I was to have received proper training on calculating my SAC rate, responding to emergencies, and adopting conservative dive practices. I was also thankful to have a buddy who I could trust to avoid panicking in an unexpected situation, as we had gone through the same training.
When I got back on the boat and removed my gear, I gingerly touched the inside of my ear with my pinky and saw a drop of blood. I was happy to be back on the surface but still worried about a potential injury, so I saw my physician the next morning. He inspected my exterior ear canal and was concerned because he could not see my eardrum, so he referred me to an ear, nose, and throat doctor (ENT) for further evaluation.
The ENT confirmed that my eardrum was fine and the issue was a hemangioma in my exterior ear canal. There was also a slight abrasion from a piece of sand or grit that had swollen and blocked most of my outer ear canal. When my regular physician had first evaluated me less than 24 hours postdive, the canal was about 95% blocked, so he could not see past the dried blood and thought my eardrum had ruptured.
The ENT removed the dried blood and the hemangioma, and my ear healed within a couple of weeks with proper care. I was diagnosed with mildly dysfunctional Eustachian tubes but was cleared for diving once my ear had completely healed. That dive has forever cemented in my mind three simple lessons from my training.
When presented with an unexpected situation, stay calm, and don’t panic. As one of my dive instructors often told me, no matter the situation, stay “slow and relaxed with good technique.” Had I panicked and tried to push through the pain to get back to the surface, I would almost certainly have experienced a severe barotrauma injury and likely a much longer recovery.
Know your limits, and plan for contingencies. I never regret having leftover gas in my tank at the end of a dive because you never know when that might be the deciding factor in an unexpected situation having a positive outcome or not.
Calculating your SAC rate is a skill every diver should know and practice. With the introduction of modern air-integrated dive computers that account for your gas consumption, knowing how to calculate your SAC rate from each dive might seem unimportant. But computers can fail, settings can be wrong, and the unexpected can happen at any time. Knowing how to do it yourself will ensure that information is always available and will give you confidence.
I needed to extend my dive to respond to an unexpected situation. Being sure how long I could safely do so without running out of air lessened my stress so I could focus on working through the problem and ending the dive safely.
© Alert Diver – Q3 2024