Vento Kaila A, Borden Cammi K, Blacker Kara J
Naval Medical Research Unit-Dayton Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, OH, United States.
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, Oak Ridge, TN, United States.
Front Physiol. 2022 Nov 23;13:1062397. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2022.1062397. eCollection 2022.
Within the tactical aviation community, human performance research lags in considering potential psychophysiological differences between male and female aviators due to little inclusion of females during the design and development of aircraft systems. A poor understanding of how male and female aviators differ with respect to human performance results in unknown potential sex differences on aeromedically relevant environmental stressors, perchance leading to suboptimal performance, safety, and health guidelines. For example, previous hypoxia studies have excluded female participants or lacked a sizeable sample to examine sex comparisons. As such, progress toward sensor development and improving hypoxia familiarization training are stunted due to limited knowledge of how individual differences, including sex, may or may not underlie hypoxia symptoms and performance impairment. Investigating sex differences bridges the gap between aerospace medicine and operational health, and addressing hypoxia is one of many facets yet to be studied. In the current study, we retrospectively examined N = 6 hypoxia studies with male-female participant samples (total, N = 189; male, = 118; female, = 71). We explored sex as a predictor of physiological response, sensory deficits, the severity of cognitive performance declines, and symptom manifestation linear and binary logistic regression models. We found that the female sex predicted lower peripheral oxygen saturation and the likelihood of headache reporting in response to hypoxic challenge, yet explained little variance when combined with age and body mass index. The sensory and cognitive performance models did not converge, suggesting high intra-individual variability. Together, sex, age, and body mass index were not the most robust predictors in responses to hypoxic challenge; we cannot infer this for sensory deficits and cognitive performance within an experimentally induced hypoxic environment. The findings have implications for improving hypoxia familiarization training, monitoring sensor development, and emergency response and recovery protocols in case of a hypoxia occurrence suitable for all aircrew. We recommend continuing to elucidate the impact of sex and intrapersonal differences in hypoxia and other aeromedically relevant stressors in tactical aviation.
在战术航空领域,由于在飞机系统的设计和开发过程中很少纳入女性,人类性能研究在考虑男性和女性飞行员之间潜在的心理生理差异方面滞后。对男性和女性飞行员在人类性能方面的差异缺乏了解,导致在与航空医学相关的环境应激源方面存在未知的潜在性别差异,这可能会导致性能、安全性和健康指南不理想。例如,以往的低氧研究要么排除了女性参与者,要么缺乏足够大的样本量来进行性别比较。因此,由于对包括性别在内的个体差异如何可能或不可能构成低氧症状和性能损害的了解有限,传感器开发和改善低氧适应性训练的进展受到阻碍。研究性别差异弥合了航空航天医学与作战健康之间的差距,而解决低氧问题是众多有待研究的方面之一。在本研究中,我们回顾性地检查了6项包含男女参与者样本的低氧研究(总计N = 189;男性,n = 118;女性,n = 71)。我们使用线性和二元逻辑回归模型,将性别作为生理反应、感觉缺陷、认知性能下降的严重程度和症状表现的预测因素进行了探索。我们发现,女性性别预测了在低氧挑战下较低的外周血氧饱和度和报告头痛的可能性,但与年龄和体重指数相结合时解释的方差很小。感觉和认知性能模型没有收敛,表明个体内部存在高度变异性。总之,性别、年龄和体重指数并不是低氧挑战反应中最有力的预测因素;对于实验诱导的低氧环境中的感觉缺陷和认知性能,我们无法得出这样的推断。这些发现对于改善低氧适应性训练、监测传感器开发以及在低氧发生时适用于所有机组人员的应急响应和恢复方案具有重要意义。我们建议继续阐明性别和个体差异在战术航空低氧及其他与航空医学相关的应激源中的影响。