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Mortimer Schnerd, RN wrote:
We will routinely put anybody with an SaO2 of less than 90% on oxygen in the hospital where I work. I generally run around 95% myself on room air. What you do in the hospital is one thing, what you need to be able to safely fly is an entirely different thing. In our glider club, we have equipped all gliders with an EDS pulse demand oxygen system. We think we have been flying noticeably better since we've routinely used it as low as 7000ft and certainily are less tired in the evening. Stefan |
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Stefan wrote:
What you do in the hospital is one thing, what you need to be able to safely fly is an entirely different thing. In our glider club, we have equipped all gliders with an EDS pulse demand oxygen system. We think we have been flying noticeably better since we've routinely used it as low as 7000ft and certainily are less tired in the evening. I only mention it (90%) as a reference to what physicians consider minimally acceptable for folks basically at sea level (~700' msl). I recognize that our needs as pilots are different in that we generally do nothing more physical than sit on our butts and push buttons. We do need a clear head though.... Above 10,000 feet I get a momentary twinge of lightheadedness if I cough. I can't really define any other obvious change though. I've never explored higher than 12,000 feet without pressurization so I can't say how rapidly I'd fall apart as I go higher. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE |
#3
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In article ,
Stefan wrote: Mortimer Schnerd, RN wrote: We will routinely put anybody with an SaO2 of less than 90% on oxygen in the hospital where I work. I generally run around 95% myself on room air. What you do in the hospital is one thing, what you need to be able to safely fly is an entirely different thing. In our glider club, we have equipped all gliders with an EDS pulse demand oxygen system. We think we have been flying noticeably better since we've routinely used it as low as 7000ft and certainily are less tired in the evening. What do you do in the evenings that you would not be too tired to do? ;-))) |
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