Aerospace Medicine Technical Reports
FAA Office of Aerospace Medicine
Civil Aerospace Medical Institute
Report No: DOT/FAA/AM-15/8
Title and Subtitle: Human Responses to a Simulated 35,000-Foot Instantaneous Decompression and the Subsequent Descent Profile Required by Federal Aviation Administration Policy
Report Date: April 2015
Authors: Self DA, Shaffstall RM, Mandella JG, Paskoff LN, White V, Burian D
Abstract:Sudden decompression of an airliner passenger cabin due to structural failure or damage is unlikely, but it poses a potentially life-threatening event for occupants. We investigated a worst-case scenario, where the passenger fails to receive supplemental oxygen during a rapid decompression (RD), and the subsequent emergency descent to 25,000 ft required by Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) policy. Our research question was whether an individual's oxygen stores will be depleted prior to the aircraft descending to an altitude that will permit inward fluxes of oxygen that exceed the resting oxygen consumption requirement.
Methods:We exposed 24 subjects to normobaric instantaneous decompressions to a simulated altitude of 35,000 ft. The peak altitude was maintained for 10 s and then followed by a 5000 ft/min descent to 25,000 ft. Resting oxygen consumption was measured prior to the hypoxia exposure. During each trial, tidal volume, respiratory rate, breath-by breath inhalation, and end-tidal O2, CO2, and N2 tensions were measured and net directional oxygen flux computed.
Results:All subjects had an initial reversal of the direction of oxygen flux following the RD that persisted until after the descent commenced with outward flux predominating at higher altitudes of the profile. Return to net inward flux almost always occurred near 29,000 ft, the altitude at which the mixed venous and alveolar PO2 gradient approximates nil. The inward flux of oxygen approached but never surpassed each subject's resting oxygen consumption as the altitude approached the 25,000 ft endpoint. Based on our data, we used computational methods to predict the O2 fluxes that would have occurred during normobaric exposures to 40,000 and 45,000 ft, along with Boyle's law effects expected during an actual rapid decompression.
Discussion: These data are unique to our knowledge, as they are the first to result from actual human exposure to the descent profile required by FAA policy. This research serves to quantitatively define this risk associated with a high altitude decompression, and may be useful in future policy decisions.
Key Words: FAA Interim Policy, Rapid Decompression, Oxygen Flux, Oxygen Deficit, Federal Aviation Administration Descent Profile, Boyle's Law
No. of Pages: 17