Modifications of Physiological Processes Concerning Extravehicular Activity in Microgravity

941334

06/01/1994

Authors
Abstract
Content
The incidence of DCS in null gravity appears to be considerably less than predicted by 1-g experiments. In NASA studies in 1-g, 83% of the incidents of DCS occur in the legs. We report first on a study with a crossover design that indicated a considerable reduction in the decompression Doppler bubble grade in the lower extremities in subjects in simulated microgravity (bed rest) as compared to themselves when ambulatory in unit gravity.
Second we describe the results of a cardiovascular deconditioning study using a tail-suspended rat model. Since there may be a reduction in bubble production in 0-g, this would reduce the possibility of acquiring neurological DCS, especially by arterial gas embolism. Further, cardiovascular deconditioning appears to reduce the pulmonary artery hypertension (secondary to gas embolization) necessary to effect arterialization of bubbles.
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/941334
Pages
12
Citation
Powell, M., Norfleet, W., Waligora, J., Kumar, K. et al., "Modifications of Physiological Processes Concerning Extravehicular Activity in Microgravity," SAE Technical Paper 941334, 1994, https://doi.org/10.4271/941334.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 1, 1994
Product Code
941334
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English