SkyWest Passengers Who Fainted Sat in the Middle of the Plane

The three passengers who passed out were in the middle of the plane.

But at least one expert doubts that’s relevant.

"The cabin is pressurized exactly the same from the front to the back," ABC News aviation analyst John Nance said today. "The fact that they're located [closely] simply means one person was noticed to be lethargic. ... We don't know what the rest of the cabin was like."

A passenger and nurse on board, Mary Cunningham, attended to two passed out passengers and saw a flight attended also get lightheaded.

"And at that point I was thinking, who else was going to be affected? Who's next?" Cunningham said. "I myself started to feel lightheaded, dizzy, just I thought I was going to pass out."

The power of suggestion can be "very psychologically powerful on an airplane," Nance, a former commercial and Air Force pilot, said, "where people are on-edge to begin with."

"At the altitude they're at, any exertion is going to make you woozy," Nance said. "I'm sure that entire airplane was woozy, they just didn't recognize it."

After the plane landed, the three people who lost consciousness, as well as 17 others, were evaluated, the Associated Press reported. No one was hospitalized, the airline said in a news release.

ABC News' David Kerley and the Associated Press contributed to this story.