1997
DOI: 10.1016/s0169-8141(96)00057-1
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Physiological effects of wearing heavy body armour on male soldiers

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Cited by 31 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…During ambulatory tasks of relatively low metabolic demand, the addition of a load elevates the required minute ventilation when compared with the unloaded state (Majumdar et al 1997;Bhambhani and Maikala 2000;Dreger et al 2006, Peoples et al 2016. Thus, ventilation tracks the load-induced change in metabolic demand, with the breathing pattern shifting towards that seen during chest-wall restriction (Caro et al 1960;Harty et al 1999) and in patients with restrictive disorders (Milic-Emili and Zin 2011;Pride and Macklem 2011).…”
Section: Cardiopulmonary Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During ambulatory tasks of relatively low metabolic demand, the addition of a load elevates the required minute ventilation when compared with the unloaded state (Majumdar et al 1997;Bhambhani and Maikala 2000;Dreger et al 2006, Peoples et al 2016. Thus, ventilation tracks the load-induced change in metabolic demand, with the breathing pattern shifting towards that seen during chest-wall restriction (Caro et al 1960;Harty et al 1999) and in patients with restrictive disorders (Milic-Emili and Zin 2011;Pride and Macklem 2011).…”
Section: Cardiopulmonary Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, the related measures of cardiovascular strain [33], pulmonary strain [37] and heart rate [36, 37] were all reported as elevated beyond control levels in participants wearing body armour suggesting that workload increased when wearing body armour. The study by Swain, et.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study used stab resistant armour (similar composition to soft armour) and other standard accessories but the results are still valid in terms of the physiological effect. Another study noted significant pulmonary function deterioration and increased mean skin temperature in exercise tasks while wearing typical military hard armour plates [113]. Even more concerning is a study that showed that soldier vigilance was diminished while carrying a heavy load while standing or walking [114].…”
Section: Man-made Hard Armourmentioning
confidence: 99%