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Nitrogen gas method question
Thread starterRunDown
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In the PPH it claims unconsciousness by nitrogen exit bag to be rapid - happening within a couple deep breaths. Why is this so? I can hold my breath for 5 minutes while diving and be fine but inert gas inhalation will knock me out immediately? What are the biological/chemical processes going on to make this so?
When you hold your breath you have a lot of oxygen still in your lungs and blood. When you breathe pure nitrogen each breath expels a whole lungful of oxygenated air from your body, replacing it with pure nitrogen.
(Oxygen doesn't just go into your blood from your lungs, it can come out too.)
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NearlyIrrelevantCake, RunDown and gottacheckout
“I love to breath. Oxygen is sexy.” — Kris Carr How long can you hold your breath? One minute? Two minutes? Pearl divers have been known to hold their breaths for over 10 minutes. When we’re breathing, though, it’s at a rate of between 8 and 20 breaths per minutes. So, many find it difficult to
I think, that information is inaccurate. A semi-conscious person may seem unconscious for naive observers who have never experienced the effects from inhaling gases like nitrogen on themselves. Formally, you probably can lose consciousness after 1 - 2 deep inspirations of nitrogen without doing the 3rd one, but you'd likely had to hold your breath for 10 - 40 seconds after completion of the last inspiration before complete loss of consciousness actually occurred. Note also that the PPH is written for old people (like 50+) who can be significantly weaker in average than 20 - 40 year-old adults, so fainting can happen faster for the intended readers of that book. When I fully inhaled nitrous oxide (which is a bit stronger sedative gas than nitrogen) in a single deep breath, losing consciousness completely took approximately 35 seconds.
I can hold my breath for 5 minutes while diving and be fine but inert gas inhalation will knock me out immediately? What are the biological/chemical processes going on to make this so?
When partial pressure of oxygen in the lungs is too low, they can do the inverse thing to their original purpose, that is taking oxygen from the blood and turning it into the gas filling the volume of the lungs, similarly to what commonly happens with carbon dioxide. Then you can exhale this oxygen.
Interestingly, you can also saturate your blood with CO2 if you breathe carbon dioxide at high concentrations like 30%. And even if you mix 30% CO2 with 70% O2, this won't prevent you from losing consciousness due to the excess of CO2 in the blood after breathing such a mixture for about half a minute.
I tested my nitrogen setup for the first time earlier this week. I wanted to test if the nitrogen they sold me really was pure, or if there was CO2 added, which does happen.
So I casually stuck the tube coming from the regulator in my mouth and adjusted the regulator to have a good flow, and since I was just testing I simply breathed out around the tube.
I pretty much blacked out in roughly 30 seconds. The onset of the blackout was surprisingly sudden. From nothing happening to rapidly shrinking tunnel vision in the space of a single breath.
So I can totally believe the descriptions of the speed at which people lose consciousness.
In the PPH it claims unconsciousness by nitrogen exit bag to be rapid - happening within a couple deep breaths. Why is this so? I can hold my breath for 5 minutes while diving and be fine but inert gas inhalation will knock me out immediately? What are the biological/chemical processes going on to make this so?
In the PPH it claims unconsciousness by nitrogen exit bag to be rapid - happening within a couple deep breaths. Why is this so? I can hold my breath for 5 minutes while diving and be fine but inert gas inhalation will knock me out immediately? What are the biological/chemical processes going on to make this so?
You don't understand, Nitrogen gas sweeps thru the body, destroying and replacing the Oxygen quickly, after about 5 deep breaths(with a ten second delay)my oximeter showed my Oxygen level dropped from 98 to 40
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