I don't recall anyone asking for peer reviews (but I have read each one, thanks BTW). Mostly because I try to provide something more than just my opinion when trying to make a point.
Let me amend something that did not become apparant to me until after re-reading this thread. The initial stages of hyperventilation, which is really what my part of the discussion should have been about, you do end up blowing off CO2, which then triggers a cascade of symptoms. My input was geared towards a more critical ill patient and not the initial stages. That's my fault as I am more use to being on medical-based forums
Here is a great abstract that talks a bit about the pathophysiology of hyperventilation syndrome. It's short
(
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10546483 ). For those that don't want to read it I'll include the last sentence: "T
he therapeutic approach to hyperventilation syndrome has several stages and/or degrees of intervention: psychological counselling, physiotherapy and relaxation, and finally drug therapy. Depending on the severity of the problem, one or more therapeutic strategies can be chosen."
So, to answer the a comment above, hyperventillation really is something that can be controlled by just calming the person down. In the ED we rarely even use oxygen in the initial stages anymore. In some ways it's like a child holding their breath. Let them do it, they will change shades of color and if they hold it long enough they will just pass out. Where they will then immediately resume normal breathing and quickly wake back up.
For the OP. You were excited, possibly slightly scared, and facing something unknown. Baring an unknown medical issue you simply "forgot" to breath regularly. If you get this same feeling in the future take 3-4 several slow deep breaths and the tingling, and feeling, should diminish. Most importantly, have fun and take some time to look out the window.