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Comparison of techniques for measuring +Gz tolerance in man

Authors :
Krutz, R. W., Jr
Rositano, S. A
Mancini, R. E
Source :
Journal of Applied Physiology. 38
Publication Year :
1975
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1975.

Abstract

Two objective methods and one subjective method for measuring +Gz tolerance (inertial vector in a head-to-foot direction) were compared on the human centrifuge. Direct eye-level blood pressure (Pa), blood flow velocity in the superficial temporal artery (Qta), and subjective visual symptoms were used to determine tolerance to rapid-onset acceleration (1 G/s) on the USAFSAM human centrifuge. Seven 'relaxed' subjects with extensive centrifuge experience were exposed to gradually increasing +Gz plateaus until the subject reported 100% loss of peripheral centrifuge gondola lights (PLL) and 50% loss of central light (CLD); viz., blackout. Zero forward Qta occurred 6 s (range 4-9 s) before subjective blackout and when mean eye-level blood pressure had reached 20 + or - 1 mm Hg (SE). The results of this study indicate that flow changes in the superficial temporal artery reflect flow changes in the retinal circulation during +Gz stress.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
38
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Journal of Applied Physiology
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19750050739
Document Type :
Report