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BE CAREFUL WITH DECOMPRESSION SYNDROME

  The first of these risks of diving, which we discussed in a previous article, occurs at the time of the diver's ascent: the air you breathe is subjected to great pressure when you dive. That's why, when you go up, nitrogen, which is what oxygen mixes with, forms bubbles in your body. These nitrogen bubbles can pass into the blood (causing strokes), move from where they formed, or stay there. It happens as long as the rise is in a short period of time. To avoid this ailment, it is necessary to carefully respect the decompression stops and their duration. In the case of suffering from decompression syndrome, adequate medical attention will be necessary in a hyperbaric chamber, which reproduces the pressure conditions when submerged in water.

Are you going to do your first scuba dive?




 Get ready to feel that you float in another world, the balance that exists under the water. The coexistence between animals and their permissiveness in your presence, the feeling of constantly discovering a new world in which we feel very small. It is curious because despite feeling that in this area we are not the strong ones, we enjoy that adrenaline that we feel knowing that we are in the marine world as spectators.

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