Can I still scuba dive after a Heart Disease Treatment ?!
Question: Can I still scuba dive after a Heart Disease Treatment ?
I am a scuba diver and I wouldn't want to stop diving.
Can I still dive after a treatment like this?
Answers:
Best Answer - Chosen by Voters
Hello,
I don't know if you have to get a medical exam before scuba diving, where you are, - or if it is enough that you self-certify.
I'm a retired uk gp, - I used to be in our military and I did a military Underwater Medicine course. I'm also a scuba diver myself.
I think it makes a difference how old you are. You would have to be in a slightly older age group, to need angioplasty and stenting. Presumably you had some warning that something was wrong with you, - you had angina or chest pains, or a heart attack, or you needed investigations for raised blood pressure, or for heart failure or shortness-of-breath?
In any case, presumably your heart muscle has already been damaged by whatever your trouble was, and you now have reduced exercise-tolerance or easy shortness-of-breath?
I think scuba diving can be very physical, and with a reduced reserve of heart-muscle you would be putting yourself and your buddy at much greater risk. Getting further chest pain or angina, or severe shortness of breath underwater, is not such a good idea, imo. Scuba diving also involves lugging a great weight of kit about the dive-site, before the dive, in my experience.
I think you are asking more, whether you get, - for example, the bends, or an embolism, or nitrogen narcosis - - easier with stents in.
Certainly having nitrogen bubbles, can compromise anyone's circulation, and if they target your heart or lung circulation you are going to be in a worse position than most.
You might find a buddy prepared to dive with you, - - I can only say that I would not, personally, - because it definitely looks partly your fault if your buddy goes and dies on you. Plus, your buddy might be the one to get into difficulties, and need *your* immediate and energetic help, - could you give that?
If I were still in medical practice, I would not give you clearance to dive, sorry. I think you know what the answer could be if you asked your Cardiologist <g>
I'm sorry. - I just don't think there's such a thing as "gentle scuba diving." Maybe there's "gentle snorkelling," you could perhaps give that a try? : )
Best wishes,
Belliger
retired uk gp
i'm not qualified to answer that, but i suggest you ask an instructor because if you are already a scuba diver you should know about the medical questionnaire that you must take before taking scuba lessons...hope this helps