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Neuroergonomic and psychometric evaluation of full-face crew oxygen masks respiratory tolerance: a proof-of-concept study

Authors :
Nierat, Marie-Cécile
Raux, M
Redolfi, S
Gonzalez-Bermejo, J
Biondi, G
Straus, C
Rivals, I
Morélot-Panzini, C
Similowski, T
Source :
Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps; 2019, Vol. 165 Issue: 5 p317-324, 8p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

IntroductionPreventing in-flight hypoxia in pilots is typically achieved by wearing oxygen masks. These masks must be as comfortable as possible to allow prolonged and repeated use. The consequences of mask-induced facial contact pressure have been extensively studied, but little is known about mask-induced breathing discomfort. Because breathlessness is a strong distractor and engages cerebral resources, it could negatively impact flying performances.MethodsSeventeen volunteers (age 20–32) rated respiratory discomfort while breathing with no mask and with two models of quick-donning full-face crew oxygen masks with regulators (mask A, mask B). Electroencephalographic recordings were performed to detect a putative respiratory-related cortical activation in response to inspiratory constraint (experiment 1, n=10). Oxygen consumption was measured using indirect calorimetry (experiment 2, n=10).ResultsWith mask B, mild respiratory discomfort was reported significantly more frequently than with no mask or mask A (experiment 1: median respiratory discomfort on visual analogue scale 0.9 cm (0.5–1.4), experiment 1; experiment 2: 2 cm (1.7–2.9)). Respiratory-related cortical activation was present in 1/10 subjects with no mask, 1/10 with mask A and 6/10 with mask B (significantly more frequently with mask B). Breathing pattern, sigh frequency and oxygen consumption were not different.ConclusionsIn a laboratory setting, breathing through high-end aeronautical full-face crew oxygen masks can induce mild breathing discomfort and activate respiratory-related cortical networks. Whether or not this can occur in real-life conditions and have operational consequences remains to be investigated. Meanwhile, respiratory psychometric and neuroergonomic approaches could be worth integrating to masks development and evaluation processes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358665
Volume :
165
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs51037916
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jramc-2018-001028