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#11
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On 20 Dec, 18:07, Dan G wrote:
If it *does* make you tired, there are alternatives that are less effective for reducing sickness but also have a lower rate of inducing tiredness. When I was looking for an alternative to the patches I visited a very helpful doctor on the Isle on Man. He was a sailor too, and was happy to prescribe me something more powerful than the usual over-the- counter stuff. As usual, the drugs came with a patient information leaflet, including details of side effects. "Caution. May induce nausea, dizziness and vomiting." Not, I felt, the greatest confidence builder for an anti seasickness pill. Ian |
#12
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Dan G wrote:
Also agree with Ian - being perhaps a little tired (and who hasn't flown a bit tired, especially towards the end of a long flight?) is safer than vomiting all over the controls! The obvious rejoinder is not to fly at all, but that may not be acceptable to the person concerned. This will obviously depend on just how tired we're talking, and also personal experience, but speaking for myself as someone who's done both, I would *vastly* prefer being a little tired. Recovery from airsickness is faster but the episode itself is much more impairing and dangerous. -- Michael Ash Rogue Amoeba Software |
#13
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Ian wrote:
On 20 Dec, 16:04, "HL Falbaum" wrote: "Ian" wrote in message ... On 19 Dec, 14:50, jodom wrote: I've reviewed the relief band in the context of my experience as a glider pilot. I'd love to hear comments from other pilots about their experiences. I sail as well as flying, and am cursed with rotten sea-sickness. I tried the pressure bands and they did have some effect, but the only thing that works effectively for me is transdermal hyoscine - Scopaderm patches. When they went off the market for a few years I had to give up sailing. I've never needed or tried them for flying though. Would suggest that being PIC and the potential effects of Scopolamine/ Hyocyamine are not compatible. Effects are subtle and variable from time to time as well as from individual to individual. Not at all benign for flying--or driving, or running dangerous machinery. I think the "potential" bit is important. It would be daft to go flying without knowing the effects of this - or any - medication. However, having had dozens of those little patches behind my ears for, cumulatively, months of my life, I am happy with them and quite confident that I could fly or drive with them. The same may not go for others, of course. They take 24 hours to get up to full power anyway, so anyone trying them should have reasonable warning of side effects. In flight air-sickness would, I suspect, be far more dangerous. Ian Scopolamine not only causes tiredness it can also cause blurred vision and dilates the the pupils which are also reasons not to use it while flying. Wayne Hoover |
#14
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On 26 Dec, 19:36, Wayne Hoover wrote:
Scopolamine not only causes tiredness it can also cause blurred vision and dilates the the pupils which are also reasons not to use it while flying. Indeed - if one is so affected. If one is not so affected, no problem. Ian |
#15
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On Dec 27, 12:33 pm, Ian wrote:
On 26 Dec, 19:36, Wayne Hoover wrote: Scopolamine not only causes tiredness it can also cause blurred vision and dilates the the pupils which are also reasons not to use it while flying. Indeed - if one is so affected. If one is not so affected, no problem. As a physician and aviation medical examiner I wish to demur as clearly as possible from any recommendation to use scopalamine for motion sickness while flying. 1: Users of perfomance-decreasing drugs are almost never aware of mild impairments that are nevertheless easily measured in formal testing. Therefore to say, 'try it and if you don't feel it affects you' is to perpetuate personal cluelessness. 2: scopalamine is a prohibited medication per FAA aeromedical rules, so if you have an incident and are found to have been using it, be aware that your insurance may not cover you, and you may face enforcement action on your licence if you survive. The non-requirement of medical certification for glider pilots is not permission to fly impaired. Every pilot is required by FARs to refrain from flying with any unsafe condition. 3: scopalamine has an incredibly long persistence in the body. For example, years ago, I put a patch on my teenage daughter before an airplane trip because she feared motion sickness. She became drowsy after a couple of hours, and I peeled it off promptly. She spent most of the next two days sleeping off and on. She said she 'felt fine' (see point 1). 4: I would no more fly with a pilot using scopalamine than I would fly with a pilot who just had a glass of wine. 5: Air force and astronaut use of scopalamine is done because of the nature of the mission, and the fact that motion sickness can be literally incapacitating - when the choice is between incapacitation and decreased function, and one can't abort the mission, the choice is no choice at all. But the fact that it's used in severe situations does not mean it's a good idea in recreation! 6: If I knew that a physician colleague had actually recommended scopalamine for a pilot, and an incident had occurred, I would be unhappily willing to serve as an expert witness against that colleague. (It is a standard of medical practice to do no harm.) Dan Johnson md |
#16
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On Dec 27, 6:54*pm, danlj wrote:
As a physician and aviation medical examiner I wish to demur as clearly as possible from any recommendation to use scopalamine for motion sickness while flying. snip So would you say the mild, unnoticeable impairment is worse than vomiting repeatedly over the controls? What would you say to the pilot faced with such a choice? Dan |
#17
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On Dec 27, 7:59*pm, Dan G wrote:
On Dec 27, 6:54*pm, danlj wrote: As a physician and aviation medical examiner I wish to demur as clearly as possible from any recommendation to use scopalamine for motion sickness while flying. snip So would you say the mild, unnoticeable impairment is worse than vomiting repeatedly over the controls? What would you say to the pilot faced with such a choice? If I read Dan G correctly, he has said that just because a person that has taken the scopalamine thinks they are unaffected doesn't mean that's actually the case. They might actually be suffering considerable impairment. Quite how someone who suffers airsickness gets over it is another matter. I suspect a lot of them move on to some other sport. |
#18
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On Dec 27, 6:54 pm, danlj wrote:
2: scopalamine is a prohibited medication per FAA aeromedical rules, so if you have an incident and are found to have been using it, be aware that your insurance may not cover you, and you may face enforcement action on your licence if you survive. The non-requirement of medical certification for glider pilots is not permission to fly impaired. Every pilot is required by FARs to refrain from flying with any unsafe condition. You piqued my interest in the US rules so I went looking for them. As far as I can see there is no such thing as a "prohibited" medications list in FAA regs. I did find, in Title 14 Part 91, the following: 91.17 Alcohol or drugs. (a) No person may act or attempt to act as a crewmember of a civil aircraft-- (1) Within 8 hours after the consumption of any alcoholic beverage; (2) While under the influence of alcohol; (3) While using any drug that affects the person's faculties in any way contrary to safety Also on the FAA website a guidance note on OTC medicines: http://www.faa.gov/pilots/safety/pil...flying_web.pdf Which makes it clear that a pilot should not fly if using a drug that lists drowsiness as a side-effect. All the new-generation "non-sedating" antihistamines list "drowsiness" as a side-effect and I personally know several pilots who use them for hay-fever relief :-/. Dan |
#19
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#20
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On Dec 28, 12:30*am, Bullwinkle wrote:
Examples of meds that can't be used at all, regardless of side effects, or effects of the underlying disorder: * * Antidepressants * * Antipsychotics * * Muscle relaxers * * Antiseizure meds (whether or not there is a seizure disorder) * * Sleeping pills (duh!) * * Narcotic pain killers * * etc. etc. There are many like this, also. Sometimes history of use of these meds requires a waiver ("special issuance", in FAA lingo), sometimes just a waiting period after the last dose. Can you or anyone else link to this list please? Dan |
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