A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity

Earlier years of research on GLOC were focussed on cardiovascular responses in high acceleration environment where cerebral blood flow and pressure were the main determinants of GLOC. However in the past years, there has been growing research which demonstrates that cerebral oxygen content can be a...

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Main Author: Muhammad Taufiq Bin Hawazi.
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/47723
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-477232023-03-04T18:40:06Z A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity Muhammad Taufiq Bin Hawazi. School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Martin Skote DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering Earlier years of research on GLOC were focussed on cardiovascular responses in high acceleration environment where cerebral blood flow and pressure were the main determinants of GLOC. However in the past years, there has been growing research which demonstrates that cerebral oxygen content can be a feasible predictor of GLOC within a certain percentage error. Hence the author decided to focus his research on improving the accuracy of using cerebral oxygen content as a determinant in +Gz studies by investigating factors affecting oxygen transport in the circulatory system leading to the brain. It was determined that blood flow and lung diffusion capacity were the two factors most likely to affect oxygen transport in +Gz stress. A theory was proposed that by finding out the relationship of diffusion capacity in lung under +Gz acceleration, it would be possible to produce more accurate models to measure changes in cerebral oxygen content under +Gz stress. Not only will the model be able to make accurate estimations in cerebral oxygen content, it would also provide a more complete description of the physiological effects of increased +Gz stress. The aim was to use diffusion capacity as a variable in a model to determine GLOC based on cerebral oxygen levels. Such a model is predicted to provide more accurate and complete description of the physiological effects of increased +Gz acceleration. An attempt was made to construct a mathematical model to demonstrate the effects of +Gz on diffusion capacity to improve the accuracy of GLOC predictive models which uses cerebral oxygen content as a determinant. However, due to lack of information on lung diffusion capacity under +Gz acceleration conditions, the model could not be completed. The author believes that even though the attempt to build a model which incorporated lung diffusion capacity as a variable in +Gz studies was unsuccessful, it is not a clear result or indication that the theory suggested by the author is invalid. Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2012-01-26T02:08:39Z 2012-01-26T02:08:39Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/47723 en Nanyang Technological University 48 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Muhammad Taufiq Bin Hawazi.
A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity
description Earlier years of research on GLOC were focussed on cardiovascular responses in high acceleration environment where cerebral blood flow and pressure were the main determinants of GLOC. However in the past years, there has been growing research which demonstrates that cerebral oxygen content can be a feasible predictor of GLOC within a certain percentage error. Hence the author decided to focus his research on improving the accuracy of using cerebral oxygen content as a determinant in +Gz studies by investigating factors affecting oxygen transport in the circulatory system leading to the brain. It was determined that blood flow and lung diffusion capacity were the two factors most likely to affect oxygen transport in +Gz stress. A theory was proposed that by finding out the relationship of diffusion capacity in lung under +Gz acceleration, it would be possible to produce more accurate models to measure changes in cerebral oxygen content under +Gz stress. Not only will the model be able to make accurate estimations in cerebral oxygen content, it would also provide a more complete description of the physiological effects of increased +Gz stress. The aim was to use diffusion capacity as a variable in a model to determine GLOC based on cerebral oxygen levels. Such a model is predicted to provide more accurate and complete description of the physiological effects of increased +Gz acceleration. An attempt was made to construct a mathematical model to demonstrate the effects of +Gz on diffusion capacity to improve the accuracy of GLOC predictive models which uses cerebral oxygen content as a determinant. However, due to lack of information on lung diffusion capacity under +Gz acceleration conditions, the model could not be completed. The author believes that even though the attempt to build a model which incorporated lung diffusion capacity as a variable in +Gz studies was unsuccessful, it is not a clear result or indication that the theory suggested by the author is invalid.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Muhammad Taufiq Bin Hawazi.
format Final Year Project
author Muhammad Taufiq Bin Hawazi.
author_sort Muhammad Taufiq Bin Hawazi.
title A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity
title_short A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity
title_full A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity
title_fullStr A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity
title_full_unstemmed A research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity
title_sort research on the effects of +gz acceleration on lung diffusion capacity
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/47723
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