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Military tactical athletes face the unique task of performing physically demanding occupational duties, often while wearing body armor. Forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume measured using spirometry have been shown to decrease, while wearing plate-carrier style body armor, little is known about the comprehensive effects of wearing body armor on pulmonary function, including lung capacities. Further, the effects of loaded body armor vs. unloaded on pulmonary function are also unknown. Therefore, this study examined how loaded and unloaded body armor affects pulmonary function. Twelve college-aged males performed spirometry and plethysmography under three conditions (basic athletic attire [CNTL], unloaded plate carrier [UNL], and loaded plate carrier [LOAD]). Compared to CNTL, LOAD and UNL conditions significantly reduced functional residual capacity by 14% and 17%, respectively. Compared with CNTL, LOAD condition also showed a small but statistically significant lowered forced vital capacity (P = .02, d = 0.3), a 6% lower total lung capacity (P < .01, d = 0.5), and lowered maximal voluntary ventilation (P = .04, d = 0.4). A loaded plate-carrier style body armor exerts a restrictive effect on total lung capacity, and both loaded and unloaded body armor affects functional residual capacity, which could impact breathing mechanics during exercise. Resulting endurance performance decreases may need to be factored based on the style and loading of body armor, especially for longer-duration operations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/milmed/usad203 | DOI Listing |
IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng
August 2025
Additive manufacturing enables the rapid production and customization of ankle-foot orthoses (AFOs), offering substantial advantages over traditional fabrication methods. Understanding the mechanical properties of these devices, particularly stiffness and deflection during ambulation, is essential for their effective deployment as it may inform future benchtop performance tests, such as fatigue life analysis. However, previous studies seemingly disregard the combined effects of the passive and active ankle joint contributions to stiffness during ambulation, limiting the predictive accuracy of the mechanical performance tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Ergon
August 2025
Mechanical Engineering, Department at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN, USA.
Soldiers experience high rates of back injuries from wearing heavy body armor. Wearable weight distribution devices that offload body armor weight to the hips might help mitigate injury risk. However, it is unclear how much offloading is practical without negatively impacting comfort or biomechanics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft-to-hard material interfaces found in multimaterial systems, such as microelectronics, prosthetics, body armor, and soft robotics, often suffer from mechanical mismatches that compromise their structural integrity overtime. These mismatches occur due to significant differences in mechanical properties, such as stiffness, between soft materials (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Mil Health
August 2025
Military Faculty of Medicine, University of Defence, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic.
Introduction: Medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) is a crucial component of military healthcare, and the time during which evacuation of the wounded, injured and ill individuals happens is one of the most critical factors. The article focuses on the initial phase of ground evacuation from the Point of Injury to the casualty collection point (CCP). Casualty transport is the combat unit's task, triggered by a 9-liner MEDEVAC request.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymers (Basel)
July 2025
School of Mechanical Engineering, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing 210094, China.
Aramid fibre has become a critical material for individual soft body armour due to its lightweight nature and exceptional impact resistance. To investigate its energy absorption mechanism, quasi-static and dynamic tensile experiments were conducted on Kevlar 29 plain-woven fabric using a universal material testing machine and a Split Hopkinson Tensile Bar (SHTB) apparatus. Tensile mechanical responses were obtained under various strain rates.
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