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Centrifuge man-rating of a conceptual internal abdominal bladder restraint in an extended coverage anti-G suit.
SAFE J. 1996 Jul; 26(2):42-6.SJ

Abstract

An extended coverage anti-G suit, has been demonstrated to improve +Gz tolerance substantially. In some pilots/subjects, however, the abdominal bladder of the anti-G suit may expand excessively upward and inward causing discomfort and pain. This man-rating was performed to evaluate the effects on +Gz protection of an internal abdominal bladder restraint in the Swedish Tactical Flight Combat Suit (TFCS) used in conjunction with pressure breathing during G (PBG). The tests were executed in the Armstrong Laboratory Centrifuge at Brooks AFB with four Swedish test fighter pilots. The centrifuge profiles included gradual onset runs (GOR, relaxed) and rapid onset runs (ROR, with straining), as well as simulated aerial combat maneuver (SACM) runs up to +9 Gz until subjects experienced light loss or fatigue or surpassed 228 s. All subjects withstood 60 s at +9 Gz during GOR and ROR runs with and without abdominal bladder restraint. No difference There was no difference in SACM duration times. In three of four subjects, abdominal pain or discomfort experienced without abdominal bladder restraint disappeared with the addition of a bladder restraint. Ratings of perceived exertion (after 5 peaks at +9 Gz in the SACM), subjective +Gz tolerance, overall comfort, fatigue, and heat stress demonstrated no relevant differences with and without abdominal bladder restraint. Therefore, to enhance comfort, it seems possible to modify the TFCS by adding an abdominal bladder internal restraint without compromising its operational +Gz protection.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Armstrong Laboratory, Brooks AFB, Texas 78235-5104, USA.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

11543403

Citation

Balldin, U I., et al. "Centrifuge Man-rating of a Conceptual Internal Abdominal Bladder Restraint in an Extended Coverage anti-G Suit." Safe Journal, vol. 26, no. 2, 1996, pp. 42-6.
Balldin UI, Krock LP, Danielsson CH, et al. Centrifuge man-rating of a conceptual internal abdominal bladder restraint in an extended coverage anti-G suit. SAFE J. 1996;26(2):42-6.
Balldin, U. I., Krock, L. P., Danielsson, C. H., & Johansson, S. A. (1996). Centrifuge man-rating of a conceptual internal abdominal bladder restraint in an extended coverage anti-G suit. Safe Journal, 26(2), 42-6.
Balldin UI, et al. Centrifuge Man-rating of a Conceptual Internal Abdominal Bladder Restraint in an Extended Coverage anti-G Suit. SAFE J. 1996;26(2):42-6. PubMed PMID: 11543403.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Centrifuge man-rating of a conceptual internal abdominal bladder restraint in an extended coverage anti-G suit. AU - Balldin,U I, AU - Krock,L P, AU - Danielsson,C H, AU - Johansson,S A, PY - 1996/7/1/pubmed PY - 2001/9/11/medline PY - 1996/7/1/entrez SP - 42 EP - 6 JF - Safe journal JO - SAFE J VL - 26 IS - 2 N2 - An extended coverage anti-G suit, has been demonstrated to improve +Gz tolerance substantially. In some pilots/subjects, however, the abdominal bladder of the anti-G suit may expand excessively upward and inward causing discomfort and pain. This man-rating was performed to evaluate the effects on +Gz protection of an internal abdominal bladder restraint in the Swedish Tactical Flight Combat Suit (TFCS) used in conjunction with pressure breathing during G (PBG). The tests were executed in the Armstrong Laboratory Centrifuge at Brooks AFB with four Swedish test fighter pilots. The centrifuge profiles included gradual onset runs (GOR, relaxed) and rapid onset runs (ROR, with straining), as well as simulated aerial combat maneuver (SACM) runs up to +9 Gz until subjects experienced light loss or fatigue or surpassed 228 s. All subjects withstood 60 s at +9 Gz during GOR and ROR runs with and without abdominal bladder restraint. No difference There was no difference in SACM duration times. In three of four subjects, abdominal pain or discomfort experienced without abdominal bladder restraint disappeared with the addition of a bladder restraint. Ratings of perceived exertion (after 5 peaks at +9 Gz in the SACM), subjective +Gz tolerance, overall comfort, fatigue, and heat stress demonstrated no relevant differences with and without abdominal bladder restraint. Therefore, to enhance comfort, it seems possible to modify the TFCS by adding an abdominal bladder internal restraint without compromising its operational +Gz protection. SN - 0191-6319 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/11543403/Centrifuge_man_rating_of_a_conceptual_internal_abdominal_bladder_restraint_in_an_extended_coverage_anti_G_suit_ L2 - https://medlineplus.gov/pain.html DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -