ean_p
Well-Known Member
Mmmmm that's not what I read........I read it as saying that the syndrome is proven in a lab environment ( symptoms including feeling faint, dizzy, palpitations, sweating, nausea and loss of vision. Loss of consciousness has occurred after a variable amount of time from 7 to 30 min. etc) but there is no definitive proof of death in the field.You didn't read the link. No it doesn't. The link reinforces the fact that suspension trauma is not a thing.
Anecdotally it refers to 'Between 1957 and 1968, post-mortems were carried out on people killed in mountain‐climbing accidents, of which five climbers who were left hanging on the rope had no obvious external or internal injuries to account for their deaths. The explanation was that they may have died from suspension trauma.' You perhaps have a different reason as to why they died that a PM was unable to find?
It concludes that significant occurrence is now prevented by good harness design and understanding of the potential. That isn't the same as saying it doesn't exist!
Moving on, it is suggested in the link that the syndrome isn't just a function of harness design though obviously it may be alleviated and or exacerbated by the design and resultant body positioning . but it goes on to mention the well recorded issues of standing vertically motionless for a significant time and also of being suspended more or less vertically using our 'sit bones' yet still motionless. As in;
'In other research, symptoms have been reproduced in healthy volunteers using passive tilt table tests with a head‐up tilt of 50° from the horizontal, with the subject supported by a bicycle saddle. This resulted in hypotension, bradycardia and presyncopal symptoms in 69 out of 79 (87%) subjects within 1 h '
Suspension Trauma: A Clinical Review
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