Aviat Space Envir Md
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Aviat Space Envir Md · Feb 1993
The effects of structural failure on injuries sustained in the M1 Boeing 737 disaster, January 1989. NLDB Study Group.
Only 10 occupants escaped uninjured from the wreckage of the East Midlands Boeing 737/400 aircraft accident. The remaining 116 suffered injuries similar in pattern, but ranging in severity from simple bruising to fatal crushing trauma. Overall, the individual's degree of injury and likelihood of death was proportional to the local structural damage of the aircraft. ⋯ Many of these had trauma to the posterior aspect of their head, some of whom died as a result. It is likely that these injuries were caused by falling overhead lockers or unrestrained cabin furniture. The significance of these injuries and their future prevention is discussed.
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Aviat Space Envir Md · Feb 1993
The effects of brace position on injuries sustained in the M1 Boeing 737/400 disaster, January 1989. NLDB Study Group.
Of the initial 87 survivors of the East Midlands Boeing 737/400 aircraft, 77 sustained head and facial trauma during the crash, 45 of whom were rendered unconscious. There were 21 who received injuries to the back of their head, including 5 of the 6 severely head-injured adults. Those passengers who adopted the fully flexed "brace" position for crash-landing achieved significant protection against head injury, concussion, and injuries from behind irrespective of local aircraft structural damage. ⋯ W. Structures, Ltd.) using the predicted crash pulse of the accident has validated these clinical findings and allows theoretical biomechanical modeling for the design of occupant protection systems in the future. Although the major role of structural failure should not be forgotten, bracing maximizes the chance of uninjured survival in the current generation of aircraft and should be demonstrated and practiced as a pre-flight routine.
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Diazepam is known to decrease organophosphate nerve agent-induced convulsions, neuropathology, and lethality in rhesus monkeys. We report that, when added to the previously fielded treatment regimen (pyridostigmine, atropine, and pralidoxime chloride), diazepam significantly protects the performance of rhesus monkeys trained in an equilibrium task, the Primate Equilibrium Platform (PEP), against deficits induced by the nerve-agent soman. If administered soon enough to minimize the occurrence of convulsions, diazepam should increase the probability of mission accomplishment and eventual complete recovery from nerve agent poisoning. Diazepam was fielded by the United States military services during Operations Desert Shield and Storm for the treatment of possible organophosphate toxicity.