1 / 13

Fitness to Fly

Fitness to Fly. The Problem. Every year 2 billion people fly Cheap travel started 30 years ago 40-50 yr olds now 70-80 yrs Older people have more disposable income Families spread round globe Sick and disabled want to fly too. Cabin environment.

ashby
Download Presentation

Fitness to Fly

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fitness to Fly

  2. The Problem • Every year 2 billion people fly • Cheap travel started 30 years ago • 40-50 yr olds now 70-80 yrs • Older people have more disposable income • Families spread round globe • Sick and disabled want to fly too

  3. Cabin environment • Cabin pressure decreases from 100kPa to 75kPa • Gas expands as pressure fall • Oxygen pressure falls • Air drawn from outside aircraft • Air is cold • Very little moisture – dry eyes etc

  4. Seating • Seats tightly packed • Immobility • Cramped seating • Spread of ariborne diseases

  5. Medical facilities • Flights over large oceans nowhere to divert to • Medical kit limited • No Doctor • Difficult environment to cope with medical emergency

  6. Assessment • Severe Asthma • Severe COPD • Severe restrictive lung diseases • Cystic fibrosis • Co-morbidity with illnesses causing hypoxaemia • Within 6/52 discharge for rti • Already requiring oxygen

  7. Who requires Oxygen • Haemoglobin oxygen sats 92% or less • Hb sats 95% don’t • Hb sats 92%-95% need assessment

  8. Gas volume changes • Middle ear • Ascending pos pressure in ear forces open eustachian tube no problem • Descending negative pressure in middle ear has opposite effect if eustachian tube dysfunctional get otic barotrauma

  9. Gas volume changes • Sinuses • Inability to equalise pressure in sinuses particularly frontal sinus can cause excruciating pain • Usually due to urti • Avoid flying • Ephedrine nasal drops • Oral pseudoephedrine

  10. Gas volume changes • Lung bullae • Risk of rupture not known • Closed pneumothorax don’t fly • Don’t fly following surgical proceedures that have left gas in delicate structure • Don’t dive in 24 hours before flying

  11. Deep vein thrombosis • Risk not known • Immobility in cramped position • Pressure on popliteal vein • Mild hypoxia • Mild dehydration

  12. Prevention • Regular exercises • Walking around cabin • Avoid alcohol drink fluids ++ • Avoid long periods of sleep • Below knee compression stockings • ? aspirin

  13. High risk flyers • Flights less than 4 hours • Usual advice • Stockings aspirin • Flights more than 4 hours • Clexane 40mgs on day of outward and inward flight • Pre-filled syringe • Given at airport

More Related