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Why do I feel the urge to pee when diving

30/5/2020

 
There are two types of divers, those who have peed in their wetsuit and those that say they haven't, which one are you?

Anyway, I defy anyone who has been diving for more than a nanosecond not to have succumbed to this at some stage.  So why does this happen particularly if you have 'been' before you went diving.

Well it is all down to your kindness, those bean-shaped organs that filter waste products from the blood and help regulate your blood pressure.
Picture
The body's total blood volume varies considerably with such factors as hydration and fluid losses through sweating, diarrhoea etc.

Various receptors therefore exist, that detect changes in blood volume and trigger compensatory mechanisms in order to help keep it as stable as possible.
When you are immersed in water, your peripheral blood vessels constrict in an attempt to minimise heat loss by moving blood away from the skin's surface and extremities, towards the warmer body core and vital organs. Although the total volume of blood in the body has not changed, the volume of blood through the body core (particularly the heart) increases.  This causes stretching of the chambers of the heart, fooling the body into thinking it is fluid-overloaded; a chain of hormone releases is triggered, which results in an increase in the rate of using production in the kidneys ("diuresis") and an uncontrollable urge to pee.
So, what can you do to dampen down this response?
Stay warm by using a thicker wetsuit, or stay warm and dry by using a drysuit.  Avoiding diuretic fluids such as tea and coffee a few hours before diving will reduce (but not eliminate) the urge to urinate underwater.  You might assume that consuming less water before a dive will similarly reduce the need to pee, but this is not the case: the core blood volume will still increase, regardless of hydration level, and the dehydration will only serve to predispose the diver to dark, smelly wee and decompression sickness.
Finally, it's worth remembering that although not the most fragrant fluid in the world, urine is sterile - so not the health hazard it may seem to be, provided you give your wetsuit a good freshwater rinse at the earliest opportunity one it's been 'used'.  Incidentally, because of urine's sterility, it is far safer to wee on your contact lenses then clean them with saliva, if you are ever caught short without lens solution.....
Thanks to Midland Diving Chamber for this... taken from the health section of the magazine you can pick up when you go for  your regular medicals.

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