Study documents headaches experienced by astronauts in space
Send a link to a friend
[March 14, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Research in the expanding field of space medicine
has identified many ways in which a microgravity environment and other
factors can meddle with the human body during space missions. A new
study has added to the field by showing that astronauts are more likely
to experience headaches in space than previously known.
The study involved 24 astronauts from the U.S., European and Japanese
space agencies who traveled aboard the International Space Station for
up to 26 weeks. All but two of them reported experiencing headaches in
space.
This was a larger proportion than the researchers had expected based on
prior anecdotal evidence. The headaches - some resembling migraines and
others resembling tension headaches - occurred not only during the first
couple of weeks in space as the body goes through the process of
adapting to microgravity, but also later.
The headaches occurring during the early period often present as
migraine-like while those experienced later in space travel present more
like a tension headache, the study found.
"We hypothesize that different mechanisms are involved for the early
headache episodes - the first one to two weeks in space - versus later
headache episodes," said neurologist WPJ van Oosterhout of Zaans Medical
Center and the Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands, lead
author of the study published this week in the journal Neurology.
"In the first week, the body has to adapt to the lack of gravity, known
as space adaptation syndrome. This phenomenon is similar to motion
sickness, and can cause nausea, vomiting and dizziness, and headaches,"
Van Oosterhout said. "The later headaches could result from an increase
in intracranial pressure. Due to microgravity, there is more fluid
accumulating in the upper part of the body and head, resulting in higher
pressure in the skull."
Migraines experienced on Earth are often throbbing and pulsating
headaches lasting four to seven hours, accompanied by symptoms such as
nausea, vomiting and hypersensitivity to light and sound, Van Oosterhout
said. Tension-type headaches on Earth usually are a more dull pain felt
over the entire head without those other symptoms, Van Oosterhout added.
[to top of second column]
|
An astronaut is shown in this handout photo provided by NASA
participating in a spacewalk that took place on December 24, 2013,
released on December 27, 2013. REUTERS/NASA/Handout via Reuters/File
Photo
The astronauts - 23 men and one woman, with an average age of about
47 - were aboard the International Space Station for missions that
took place from November 2011 to June 2018, with a total of 378
headaches reported by 22 of the 24 astronauts during a total of
3,596 days in orbit. None of the 24 reported headaches in the three
months after returning to Earth.
Thirteen of the astronauts were from NASA, six from the European
Space Agency, two from Japan's JAXA and one from the Canadian Space
Agency. None had ever been diagnosed with migraines prior to their
space missions and none had a history of recurrent headaches.
Various documented effects of space travel include bone and muscle
atrophy, changes in the brain, cardiovascular system and immune
system, issues with the balance system in the inner ear and a
syndrome involving the eyes. Cancer risk from greater radiation
exposure in space is another concern.
Experts are unsure of how much of a barrier these effects might be
on human space travel over extended periods, for instance for
journeys to our neighboring planet Mars or beyond.
"The honest answer is that we don't know the effects of
long-duration space travel - possibly years - on the human body,"
Van Oosterhout said. "It is clear that even short-term - days or
weeks - to medium-term - weeks or months - duration exposure to
microgravity already has some effects, mostly reversible, on the
human body. This is a clear task for the field of space medicine."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|