It's true what they say, getting narced is fun — of a certain kind. Similar to drinking way too much, then driving waaay too fast. As in, "Whoa, dude, you almost hit that tree! Hahahaha!"

Which should indicate the downside. Not to sound like your mother here, but nitrogen narcosis is, in fact, drunk diving. Though you hear a lot about decompression illness, getting narced should probably be a bigger worry, at least when you dive below 100 feet. At that depth, nitrogen narcosis becomes more likely than a DCI hit, and when it occurs it is more dangerous because it attacks your most important piece of life-support equipment: your brain. That, not DCI, is the primary reason for the traditional recreational depth limit of 130 feet. But there's good news too: You can manage this risk and still dive safely below 100 feet.

What Is Nitrogen Narcosis?

You probably know the term "rapture of the deep" and have heard stories of divers offering their regs to fish and so on. Inappropriate euphoria and general silliness are the best known symptoms of nitrogen narcosis, though narcosis can also trigger anxiety, even terror. The exact mechanism is not well understood, but it's probably no coincidence that the usual symptoms resemble the early stages of general anesthesia. Compare, for example, the effects of the common dental anesthetic nitrous oxide, called laughing gas. "The same kinds of mechanisms are involved," says Dr. Peter B. Bennett, author of the chapter on inert gas narcosis in Alfred Bove's Diving Medicine. "General anesthesia and nitrogen narcosis both occur when a given anesthetic gas — and I would include nitrogen as one — reaches a certain critical molar concentration." In fact, nitrogen narcosis "may be considered as a state of impending general anesthesia" according to the authors of Diving and Subaquatic Medicine. Not the best mental state, probably, with 100 feet of water over your head.

Nitrogen narcosis has also been compared to alcoholic intoxication, the so-called "Martini Law" — each 50 feet of descent is equivalent to drinking one martini. Your thinking slows down. Your inhibitions and self-control are reduced, allowing euphoria or anxiety to emerge. Perceptual narrowing and a tendency to become fixed on one idea are common. Nitrogen narcosis, like alcohol, also impairs your motor control and memory. If it progresses far enough, you become unconscious. Precisely which mental functions are impaired, in what order and to what degree are debated by researchers, and studies have yielded conflicting results. What everyone agrees on, however, is that nitrogen narcosis degrades your ability to react quickly to a crisis and reason your way out of it.

Not You? You Wish

You've been below 100 feet many times and you've never been narced? Maybe. Divers, like drinkers, vary widely in their susceptibility, and you may in fact be more resistant to narcosis than some others. But it's hard to know that for sure based on your subjective feelings. "One of the biggest effects of nitrogen narcosis is an amnesia of what happened when you were down there," says Bennett. "Divers don't even remember what they were like." So you may have been more narced than you remember. Add forgetfulness to overconfidence and recklessness, other important effects of nitrogen narcosis, and you're like the guy leaving the party after a few too many who insists he's OK to drive. He has done it before and may do it again, but only if he's not called upon to react to a sudden emergency like a sharp curve and a stout tree.

Nitrogen narcosis is related to the partial pressure of the nitrogen in your gas mix, so narcosis becomes more likely as you go deeper. You may as well say nitrogen narcosis is caused by going deep. The threshold for significant narcosis on air is often said to be 100 feet, but that's only a rough guide. Actually, narcosis probably begins to appear as soon as you leave the surface. For example, a Navy test found slight but measurable effects at only 33 feet. It's a lot like asking what blood alcohol level constitutes drunk driving. The law states a number, though everyone knows there is some effect on your reaction time at lower levels.

Nitrogen and alcohol are different in some ways too. Serious, noticeable narcosis comes on more quickly whenever you reach your personal threshold depth. Studies show it reaches a peak within two minutes, and does not get worse even after three hours at that depth. It goes away very quickly as you ascend, and totally disappears before you reach the surface. As far as anyone knows, nitrogen narcosis, unlike alcohol abuse, does not do long-term harm and leaves no hangover. However, it's not what narcosis itself does to you that you should worry about, it's the harm you can do yourself because you're too narced to think clearly.

Many Unknowns

Different divers feel different amounts of narcosis at the same depth. The same diver may feel different amounts of narcosis at the same depth on different days. Narcosis takes different forms, too. Just as there are happy drunks, sad drunks and angry drunks, some divers are euphoric when narced, but some are terrified and some are just confused.

Some of the variables affecting all divers are:

In addition to the variables that affect all divers, some divers seem to be more susceptible to nitrogen narcosis than others. Obviously the relaxed, healthy diver with good breathing habits and a low air consumption rate has an advantage over the nervous, heavy breather. Also, some experts think highly intelligent and emotionally stable divers are less susceptible to nitrogen narcosis.

Adaptation to Narcosis

Most divers who regularly go very deep on air are convinced that they become adapted to it and after a while have less trouble with nitrogen narcosis. Is it true physical adaptation (meaning the divers are actually less narced) or have the divers just learned to compensate better for it? That's another unknown. The adaptation, if that's what it is, is temporary. Most say it wears off in about five days.

In any event, common practice among divers who must go very deep using air is to work up to the depth by making the first dive of each day progressively deeper. In 1989, Bret Gilliam set a depth record on air of 452 feet, and worked down to the depth with more than 600 dives, at least 100 of them deeper than 300 feet. As a result, Gilliam was not so narced at 452 feet that he could not do a series of math problems and, more to the point, return to the surface alive.

How Deep Is Too Deep?

Gilliam's 452 feet on air is off the chart for the rest of us. Various studies have described the narcotic effect of air at 300 feet as "stupefaction," "severe narcosis," "marked impairment of practical ability and judgment," and even unconsciousness. Other reports: "severe impairment of intellectual performance" at 230 feet; "sleepiness, illusions, impaired judgment" at 165 feet; and "idea fixation, perceptual narrowing and overconfidence" in the 100- to 132-foot range. Probably the customary 130-foot limit for recreational diving in the U.S. is a good one until you know better your personal susceptibility to nitrogen narcosis and have trained yourself in coping with it. For diving much deeper than that, trimix (in which most of the nitrogen is replaced with less-narcotic helium) is probably a safer gas.

How To Tell If You Are Narced

That's tough because your judgment, the faculty you depend on to tell you if you are affected, is the first to be attacked by the narcosis. Returning to the analogy to alcohol, it's like asking how you can tell if your driving is affected after you've had a few drinks. In both cases, you should probably just assume it.

Some divers experienced with deep water like Gilliam have developed their own versions of roadside sobriety tests. Not foolproof, but better than nothing:

These "roadside" tests aren't foolproof because many of the effects of mild to moderate nitrogen narcosis can be overcome, or at least masked, if you try hard enough. Your mind can be impaired, but if you devote all your diminished resources to one job, you can do it well. This can drive researchers crazy. In one case, subjects in a chamber at a "depth" where they should have been narced performed the tests better than at the surface. In other studies, narced divers have often been able to attain good accuracy at the expense of speed, or vice versa. This means you might be able to perform the match-slates test or the count-fingers test and still be narced. So watch your responses (and your buddy's) for both accuracy and speed.

You are like the drunk driver who, by fierce concentration, is able to keep his car between the white lines. Obviously, the greater danger for both of you is the unexpected, not the routine. It's the entanglement or a regulator free-flow, the sharp curve and the tree. So leave the nitrogen party early and dive carefully. Mom's right: There is such a thing as too much fun.

How To Beat Narcosis

Start by assuming you will be narced if you go deeper than 100 feet. You can't prevent nitrogen narcosis entirely, but you can minimize it and compensate for it.