Astronaut study reveals effects of space travel on human bones
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[July 02, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A study of bone loss
in 17 astronauts who flew aboard the International Space Station is
providing a fuller understanding of the effects of space travel on the
human body and steps that can mitigate it, crucial knowledge ahead of
potential ambitious future missions.
The research amassed new data on bone loss in astronauts caused by the
microgravity conditions of space and the degree to which bone mineral
density can be regained on Earth. It involved 14 male and three female
astronauts, average age 47, whose missions ranged from four to seven
months in space, with an average of about 5-1/2 months.
A year after returning to Earth, the astronauts on average exhibited
2.1% reduced bone mineral density at the tibia - one of the bones of the
lower leg - and 1.3% reduced bone strength. Nine did not recover bone
mineral density after the space flight, experiencing permanent loss.
"We know that astronauts lose bone on long-duration spaceflight. What's
novel about this study is that we followed astronauts for one year after
their space travel to understand if and how bone recovers," said
University of Calgary professor Leigh Gabel, an exercise scientist who
was the lead author of the research published this week in the journal
Scientific Reports
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-13461-1.
"Astronauts experienced significant bone loss during six-month
spaceflights - loss that we would expect to see in older adults over two
decades on Earth, and they only recovered about half of that loss after
one year back on Earth," Gabel said.
The bone loss occurs because bones that typically would be
weight-bearing on Earth do not carry weight in space. Space agencies are
going to need to improve countermeasures - exercise regimes and
nutrition - to help prevent bone loss, Gabel said.
"During spaceflight, fine bone structures thin, and eventually some of
the bone rods disconnect from one another. Once the astronaut comes back
to Earth, the remaining bone connections can thicken and strengthen, but
the ones that disconnected in space can't be rebuilt, so the astronaut's
overall bone structure permanently changes," Gabel said.
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The International Space Station (ISS) photographed by Expedition 56
crew members from a Soyuz spacecraft after undocking, October 4,
2018. NASA/Roscosmos/Handout via REUTERS
The study's astronauts flew on the space station in
the past seven years. The study did not give their nationalities but
they were from the U.S. space agency NASA, Canadian Space Agency,
European Space Agency and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
Space travel poses various challenges to the human body - key
concerns for space agencies as they plan new explorations. For
instance, NASA is aiming to send astronauts back to the moon, a
mission now planned for 2025 at the earliest. That could be a
prelude to future astronaut missions to Mars or a longer-term
presence on the lunar surface.
"Microgravity affects a lot of body systems, muscle and bone being
among them," Gabel said.
"The cardiovascular system also experiences many changes. Without
gravity pulling blood towards our feet, astronauts experience a
fluid shift that causes more blood to pool in the upper body. This
can affect the cardiovascular system and vision.
"Radiation is also a large health concern for astronauts as the
further they travel from Earth the greater exposure to the sun's
radiation and increased cancer risk," Gabel said.
The study showed that longer space missions resulted both in more
bone loss and a lower likelihood of recovering bone afterward.
In-flight exercise - resistance training on the space station -
proved important for preventing muscle and bone loss. Astronauts who
performed more deadlifts compared to what they usually did on Earth
were found to be more likely to recover bone after the mission.
"There is a lot we still do not know regarding how microgravity
affects human health, particularly on space missions longer than six
months, and on the long-term health consequences," Gabel said. "We
really hope that bone loss eventually plateaus on longer missions,
that people will stop losing bone, but we don't know."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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