Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




SPACE MEDICINE
Simulated Mars mission reveals body's sodium rhythms
by Staff Writers
Nashville TN (SPX) Jan 11, 2013


In 2005, planning began for Mars500 - a collaboration between Russia, the European Union and China to prepare for manned spaceflight to Mars. Mars500 was conducted at a research facility in Moscow between 2007 and 2011 in three phases: a 15-day phase to test the equipment, a 105-day phase, and a 520-day phase to simulate a full-length manned mission.

Clinical pharmacologist Jens Titze, M.D., knew he had a one-of-a-kind scientific opportunity: the Russians were going to simulate a flight to Mars, and he was invited to study the participating cosmonauts. Titze, now an associate professor of Medicine at Vanderbilt University, wanted to explore long-term sodium balance in humans. He didn't believe the textbook view - that the salt we eat is rapidly excreted in urine to maintain relatively constant body sodium levels.

The "Mars500" simulation gave him the chance to keep salt intake constant and monitor urine sodium levels in humans over a long period of time.

Now, in the Jan. 8 issue of Cell Metabolism, Titze and his colleagues report that - in contrast to the prevailing dogma - sodium levels fluctuate rhythmically with 7-day and monthly cycles. The findings, which demonstrate that sodium is stored in the body, have implications for blood pressure control, hypertension and salt-associated cardiovascular risk.

Titze's interest in sodium balance was sparked by human space flight simulation studies he conducted in the 1990s that showed rhythmic variations in sodium urine excretion.

"It was so clear to me that sodium must be stored in the body, but no one wanted to hear about that because it was so different from the textbook view," he said.

He and his team persisted with animal studies and demonstrated that the skin stores sodium and that the immune system regulates sodium release from the skin.

In 2005, planning began for Mars500 - a collaboration between Russia, the European Union and China to prepare for manned spaceflight to Mars. Mars500 was conducted at a research facility in Moscow between 2007 and 2011 in three phases: a 15-day phase to test the equipment, a 105-day phase, and a 520-day phase to simulate a full-length manned mission. Crews of healthy male cosmonauts volunteered to live and work in an enclosed habitat of sealed interconnecting modules, as if they were on an international space station.

Titze and his colleagues organized the food for the mission and secured commitments from the participants to consume all of the food and to collect all urine each day. They studied twelve men: six for the full 105-day phase of the program, and six for the first 205 days of the 520-day phase.

"It was the participants' stamina to precisely adhere to the daily menu plans and to accurately collect their urine for months that allowed scientific discovery," Titze said.

The researchers found that nearly all (95 percent) of the ingested salt was excreted in the urine, but not on a daily basis. Instead, at constant salt intake, sodium excretion fluctuated with a weekly rhythm, resulting in sodium storage. The levels of the hormones aldosterone (a regulator of sodium excretion) and cortisol (no known major role in sodium balance) also fluctuated weekly.

Changes in total body sodium levels fluctuated on monthly and longer cycles, Titze said. Sodium storage on this longer cycle was independent of salt intake and did not include weight gain, supporting the idea that sodium is stored without accompanying increases in water.

The findings suggest that current medical practice and studies that rely on 24-hour urine samples to determine salt intake are not accurate, he said.

"We understand now that there are 7-day and monthly sodium clocks that are ticking, so a one-day snapshot shouldn't be used to determine salt intake."

Using newly developed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technologies to view sodium, Titze and his colleagues have found that humans store sodium in skin (as they found in their animal studies) and in muscle.

The investigators suspect that genes related to the circadian "clock" genes, which regulate daily rhythms, may be involved in sodium storage and release.

"We find these long rhythms of sodium storage in the body particularly intriguing," Titze said. "The observations open up entirely new avenues for research."

.


Related Links
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Space Medicine Technology and Systems






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SPACE MEDICINE
Station Spinal Ultrasounds Seeking Why Astronauts Grow Taller in Space
Houston TX (SPX) Jan 04, 2013
Did you ever wish you could be just a teensy bit taller? Well, if you spend a few months in space, you could get your wish - temporarily. It is a commonly known fact that astronauts living aboard the International Space Station grow up to 3 percent taller while living in microgravity. They return to their normal height when back on Earth. Studying the impact of this change on the spine an ... read more


SPACE MEDICINE
Russia to add 3 new anti-missile radars

Dutch Patriot missiles head for Turkey's Syria border

US Patriot missiles begin arriving in Turkey

Patriot missile troops in Turkey as Syria war worsens

SPACE MEDICINE
Short-range ballistic missile again fired in Syria: NATO

Iran develops new missile launcher

Thatcher 'warned France to cut off Exocets in Falklands war'

Raytheon awarded $254.6 million for Tomahawk missile

SPACE MEDICINE
Elbit Systems to Supply Long-Range Observation Systems to the Israeli Ministry of Defense

US Army Awards AeroVironment Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems Contract

Northrop Grumman Building Company-Owned UAVs For Navy

Northrop Grumman Delivers Global Hawks to USAF

SPACE MEDICINE
MUOS Waveform Will Improve Secure Communications Capabilities

DARPA selects SwRI's K-band space crosslink radio for flight development as part of System F6 Program

BAE pulls out of Australian comms tender

Can You Program a Radio to Dominate the Spectrum?

SPACE MEDICINE
Elbit Systems to Supply the Israeli Ministry of Defense with Cardom Artillery Systems

British military drops US pistol for Austrian gun

Raytheon's Quick Kill System Defeats Lethal Armor-Piercing RPGs

SAIC Awarded Contract By U.S. Army Environmental Command

SPACE MEDICINE
US military ordered to prepare for fiscal 'perfect storm'

Ex-Russia defence chief faces graft charges

Dassault, India tussle over supply chains

Associate of arms trafficker Bout arrested in Australia: US

SPACE MEDICINE
Japan PM fires fresh broadside at China in row

Hong Kong reporters slam bid to curb information

China paper says regulation must 'keep pace with times'

Japan scrambles jets against China military planes

SPACE MEDICINE
Nanoparticles reach new peaks

Oh, Christmas tree, oh Christmas tree

Britain to fund graphene research efforts

Synthetic and biological nanoparticles combined to produce new metamaterials




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement