Office of Aerospace Medicine Technical Reports
FAA Office of Aerospace Medicine
Civil Aerospace Medical Institute
Report No: DOT/FAA/AM-85/5
Title and Subtitle: Some effects of alcohol and simulated altitude on complex performance scores and Breathalyzer readings.
Report Date: July 1985
Authors: Collins WE, Mertens HW, Higgins EA.
Abstract: This study assessed possible interactive effects of alcohol and a simulated altitude of 12,500 ft. Each of 17 men was trained on the various tasks that comprise the Multiple Task Performance Battery and then performed over a 2-week period in four experimental sessions, viz, ground level (1,300 ft), with and without alcohol, and altitude (12,500 ft), with and without alcohol.
Subjects breathered [sic] appropriate gas mixtures through oxygen masks at both ground level and altitude. Subjects performed for 3 hours in the afternoon. Alcohol doses were 2.2 mL of 100-proof vodka per kilogram of body weight mixed with three parts of a selected juice. Each 1-hour test block included five 10-minute performance periods with varying workloads and a 10-minute period for controlled breath analyzer measurements. Results showed no differential effect of simulated altitude on breath analyzer readings (peaks averaged .078% at 12,500 ft and .077% at ground level).
The best performance occurred at ground level under placebo conditions; the 12,500-ft simulated altitude produced some decrement for the placebo scores were depressed by altitude. Thus, there was no interactive effect of alcohol and altitude on either breath analyzer readings or performance scores. However, the general decrement produced by altitude (with or without alcohol) serves to reduce further whatever margin of safety remains in performance skills following alcohol ingestion.
Key Words: altitude, alcohol consumption, simulation, ground level, skills, performance tests, performance(human), interactions, gases, mixtures, reduction, dosage, respiration, placebos, scoring, body weight, margin of safety, alcohols, oxygen masks.
No. of Pages: 12
Civil Aerospace Medical Institute
Report No: DOT/FAA/AM-85/5
Title and Subtitle: Some effects of alcohol and simulated altitude on complex performance scores and Breathalyzer readings.
Report Date: July 1985
Authors: Collins WE, Mertens HW, Higgins EA.
Abstract: This study assessed possible interactive effects of alcohol and a simulated altitude of 12,500 ft. Each of 17 men was trained on the various tasks that comprise the Multiple Task Performance Battery and then performed over a 2-week period in four experimental sessions, viz, ground level (1,300 ft), with and without alcohol, and altitude (12,500 ft), with and without alcohol.
Subjects breathered [sic] appropriate gas mixtures through oxygen masks at both ground level and altitude. Subjects performed for 3 hours in the afternoon. Alcohol doses were 2.2 mL of 100-proof vodka per kilogram of body weight mixed with three parts of a selected juice. Each 1-hour test block included five 10-minute performance periods with varying workloads and a 10-minute period for controlled breath analyzer measurements. Results showed no differential effect of simulated altitude on breath analyzer readings (peaks averaged .078% at 12,500 ft and .077% at ground level).
The best performance occurred at ground level under placebo conditions; the 12,500-ft simulated altitude produced some decrement for the placebo scores were depressed by altitude. Thus, there was no interactive effect of alcohol and altitude on either breath analyzer readings or performance scores. However, the general decrement produced by altitude (with or without alcohol) serves to reduce further whatever margin of safety remains in performance skills following alcohol ingestion.
Key Words: altitude, alcohol consumption, simulation, ground level, skills, performance tests, performance(human), interactions, gases, mixtures, reduction, dosage, respiration, placebos, scoring, body weight, margin of safety, alcohols, oxygen masks.
No. of Pages: 12
Last updated: Friday, June 1, 2012