Will downing a Big Mac or a bucket of extra-crispy
KFC before a dive reduce your chances of getting bent?
Research suggests that both the uptake and elimination
of nitrogen are increased by increased amounts of
fat (lipids) in circulating blood. Also, a high-fat meal
temporarily escalates heart output pressure. A short
report recently published in the July issue of Aviation,
Space, and Environmental Medicine investigated the hypothesis
that since nitrogen is five times more soluble in fat
than water, fatty blood circulating at increased pressure
might speed the rate of nitrogen off-gassing.
A group of 10 young, healthy men were allowed
nothing but water after midnight the day before the experiment, then they were randomly given a low-fat
control meal and a high-fat experimental meal, at least a
week apart. The latter meal contained three to five times
the amount of fat consumed by Americans in an average
meal, upping the triglyceride level in the blood by about
250 percent% over that for the low-fat meal.
Nitrogen washout, which was measured about
three hours after each meal, did not differ significantly
between the low-fat and high-fat meals. Cardiac output
increases did not result in significantly increased blood
flow in the calves.
The conclusion: It's very likely eating a greasy meal
prior to a dive won't reduce your DCS risk, but it still
may allow you to enjoy the taste of it multiple times
over the course of a dive.
- - Doc Vikingo