SPACE MEDICINE

study of the medical and biological effects of space travel on living organisms. The principal aim is to discover how well and for how long humans can withstand the extreme conditions encountered in space, as well as how well they can readapt to the earth's environment after a space voyage. The medically significant aspects of space travel include weightlessness, strong inertial forces experienced during liftoff and reentry, radiation exposure, absence of the earth's day-and-night cycle, and existence in a closed ecological environment. Less critical factors are the noise, vibration, and heat produced within the spacecraft. On longer space flights, the psychological effects of isolation and living in close quarters have been a concern, especially among multinational crews with inherent differences in language and culture.

A large body of useful medical data on the effects of a prolonged U.S. space flight was obtained during the Skylab program of the early 1970s and from several medical missions of the space shuttles Challenger and Columbia. The Soviet Union's Soyuz program began Russia's experience with long stays in space; the current record of nearly 439 days was set by Russian cosmonaut Valery Polyakov (Jan. 8, 1994–Mar. 22, 1995) on the space station Mir. With the change in the international political climate in the 1990s, the two countries began to cooperate in life-science research that combined the more sophisticated diagnostic and monitoring equipment of the NASA missions with the greater long-term-stay experience of the Russians. In May, 1995, the Spektr module, containing U.S. medical and research equipment, was added to the Mir. A few months later, American physician-astronaut Norman E. Thagard broke the former U.S. record of 84 continuous days in space when he spent 111 days on the Russian space station.

There have been many indirect benefits to medicine from space science. The need to maintain close watch over the physiological conditions of astronauts has spurred the development of improved means for electronically monitoring essential body functions. The development of programmable heart pacemakers, implantable drug administration systems, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and computerized axial tomography (CAT) all depended to some extent on knowledge gained from the space program. Studies of how astronauts would walk in the moon's weak gravitational field led to a deeper understanding of human locomotion.

See also aviation medicine; space science.

Medically Significant Aspects of Space Flight

Weightlessness

Of all the medically significant conditions experienced in space flight, weightlessness has the most drastic effects; moreover, it will be impossible to eliminate this aspect of space travel unless large space stations can be constructed that produce artificial gravity, as by rotating. Because life evolved under the constant influence of gravity, the effects of weightlessness even on the cellular level have been a concern. It was at first feared that a human being in space might lose all coordination and become completely incapacitated. While the human body does appear to adjust fairly quickly in a state of weightlessness, associated problems do occur, often causing difficulties only upon return to earth. Problems include space adaptation syndrome (nausea, motion sickness, and sensory disorientation during the first few days), weakened immune defenses, loss of bone mass, loss of muscle mass (including loss of heart muscle), and space anemia, which results as the number of red cells decreases. Russian astronauts undergo strenuous exercise routines twice daily to try and maintain bone and large muscle mass. Nevertheless, some have had to be carried on stretchers when they first return to earth.

Inertial Forces

Inertial forces due to acceleration are experienced only during liftoff and reentry, but the consequences can be traumatic. The circulatory system is most strongly affected; deprivation of blood to the brain causes dimming of vision and sometimes loss of consciousness. However, lying on a body-contoured couch, astronauts have survived inertial forces eight times stronger than normal gravity.

Ionizing Radiation

In space the astronauts are exposed to ionizing radiation from particles trapped in the earth's magnetic field, from solar flares, and from the onboard nuclear reactors that help power the spacecraft. This radiation can produce deleterious effects, ranging from nausea and lowered blood count to genetic mutations and leukemia. Protective shielding, shielding chemicals, and careful monitoring of the doses of radiation received by each astronaut have been used to reduce radiation exposure to acceptable levels.

Absence of Day and Night

The absence of the earthly cycle of day and night during space travel produces subtle effects, both physiological and psychological. The period from sunrise to sunset in a quickly orbiting space shuttle may be as little as 1 1/2 hours long. All body rhythms, such as heartbeat, respiration, and changes in body temperature, are regulated by biological clocks (see biorhythm). These rhythms are related to human patterns of sleep and wakefulness, which in turn are based on the alternation of day and night. On most flights, adherence to "home" schedules maintains normal human cycles.

A Closed Environment

In the closed environment of the spacecraft care must be taken to prevent the buildup of toxic material to dangerous levels; this is accomplished by recycling waste material. The nature of the artificial atmosphere astronauts breathe is an important biomedical consideration. Ideally, this atmosphere would be identical in composition and pressure to the earth's atmosphere. Any alteration involves the risk of decompression sickness. The space shuttle uses a pure oxygen atmosphere or a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen.

Bibliography

See A.E. Nicogossian, C.L. Huntoon, and S.L. Pool, Space Physiology and Medicine (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...adventures of the emerging subgenre of space opera. (To this day, the only...fiction, it seems, is to combine medicine with space travel, as occurs in Murray Leinsters...on the advertising industry, The Space Merchants (1954). Still, even...
...Kane J. 1980b. Yoga and medicine: a healing partnership . Yoga...Social Science to Clinical Medicine and Health Policy , 359-391...study in Taiwan . Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 6 :405...bureaucratic settings: The case of space medicine . Journal of Health...
...Dossey is a physician of internal medicine. Dossey is past president of...author of seven books, including: Space, Time, Medicine 1982 , Beyond Illness 1984 , Recovering...Spiritual Search 1989 , Meaning and Medicine 1991 , Prayer is Good Medicine...
...Garrison, An Introduction to the History 0/ Medicine, p. 21. 7. Larry Dossey, Time, Space and Medicine, pp. 3-6. 8. Fritjof Capra, The...A foundations perspective, Journal 0/ Medicine and Philosophy, vol. 14, pp. 168...
...speciality of public health medicine, or to softer alternative medicine: For those Physicians which...and drinks should be the Medicines of the more grievous diseases...van Helmont left some space in his medicine for regimen. He stressed...
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...Testing the Limits: Aviation Medicine and the Origins of Manned Space Flight. by Rick W. Sturdevant...Testing the Limits: Aviation Medicine and the Origins of Manned...faster and higher. Aviation medicine, on the other hand, became space medicines taproot. Maura Phillips Mackowski...
Spaces, Objects and Identities in Early Modern Italian Medicine by James Shaw Sandra Cavallo and David Gentilcore (eds), Spaces, objects and identities in...Vivo both study the commercial spaces of apothecary shops in the seventeenth...
...Healing in community: medicine, contested terrains...into the epistemological space of healing. Here, Tuareg...patients but also across spaces, from the personal to...1 (the ethnographic space of Tuareg medicine...entitled The medical space of alterity, the many...communicate across these spaces and tame the wild as...
...for the Future: Disease and Medicine in Science Fiction and Fantasy...of the theme of disease and medicine in SF and fantasy. There is...works involving disease and medicine, including film and television...primarily young male readers wanted space opera, not stories about medicine...
...contemporary veterinary medicine. Also visible is a...labeling of foods, drugs, medicines, and liquors. Although...move by the Veterinary Medicine program to its new location...changing function of the space that formerly housed...significant changes in space use occurring in the...function, from Veterinary Medicine to Storage/Carpenters...
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Medicines from Space. by S.J. Ackerman , Dori...important. The process used in space can work to separate other...Additional experience in space has opened stellar new vistas in several fields of medicine. For the short term, "were...
How the Space Station will benefit earthlings: Science, medicine, and education will get a boost...Duffy Aboard the International Space Station, astronauts, cosmonauts...scientific tools at their fingertips, space station crews are working in...
Surgery in space. What would happen if an astronaut on the space station had an attack of appendicitis? He or she could...Diane Moser in Ad Astra, the magazine of the National Space Society. An astronaut needing surgery could be tethered...
Ayurvedic Medicine by Marc Carrier IMAGINE CONSULTING...the five basic elements: space, air, fire, water and earth. Ayurvedic medicine teaches that good health is...complementary and alternative medicines), simple faith in a therapy...Complementary and Alternative Medicine (a branch of the National...
...itself into the formerly sacred space of the doctor-patient relationship. The "art" part of medicine is being blasted to smithereens...process, outcomes, and value. Medicine always has changed, but the...measurement; * evidence-based medicine using up-to-the-minute...values and goals to align with medicines values and goals; and * exercise...
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...Says Prevention Is Still Best Medicine; Small Firm of the Week...her first practice in rented space before selling her home last...I will use conventional medicine but I think the body is capable...Tracy Farrell believes modern medicine and her form of therapy can...
...reduction. Worse, the presidents space team is sending conflicting signals...surgery, nanomachines and nuclear medicine, and built industries and high...technologies developed by our space programs. Will space remain an economic and technological...
...look at Americas achievement in space and see it as a vain plaything...the full spectrum of science, medicine and engineering. Far from being...profile activity in outer space can inspire 1,000 kids a year...search for a replacement to their space shuttle. Drawing on their love...
...over-the-counter cold medicines caused more than 120 child...counter cough-and-cold medicine that may still be taking up space in the medicine cabinet. You might expect...these readily available medicines, but if so, I havent...
Roni Has Medicine to Give You Dance Fever...who is set to play at the Medicine Bar tomorrow night. BRISTOL...when he plays Birminghams Medicine Bar. Expelled from school...Sessions from the legendary Space, in Ibiza. You can catch...
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SPACE MEDICINE study of the medical and biological...have been many indirect benefits to medicine from space science. The need to maintain close...human locomotion. See also aviation medicine ; space science . Medically Significant Aspects...
AVIATION MEDICINE scientific study of the biological...beings. Although aviation medicine is concerned with such problems...the biological problems of space flight exceed considerably...become a special branch of space medicine , the latter study...
AEROSPACE MEDICINE see aviation medicine ; space medicine . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...equipment, is provided in a large capsule. Space biology (or exobiology ) and space medicine study the reactions of human, animal, and plant life to the physical stresses encountered in space, such as weightlessness and radiation exposure...
...as botany , zoology , genetics , and medicine . Each of these subjects is itself divided...animal husbandry; and many aspects of medicine. Finally, there are distinct disciplines...and the beginnings of the science of medicine. Wheeled vehicles and bronze metallurgy...
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