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SPACE MEDICINE
Vitamin super-cocktail to combat 60 days of lying in bed
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Sep 22, 2017


Bedrest volunteer enjoying a meal during a study at the MEDES space clinic in Toulouse, France. Volunteers lie in beds with the head end tilted down 6 degreesmedes-space-clinic-meal-bedrest-volunteerfor months, keeping at least one shoulder on their bed at all times. Intense bedrest such is this is no fun: muscles and bones waste away, and the tilted beds makes blood and fluids move to the head - similar to the changes astronauts endure in space.

This week will see the second ESA bedrest study investigating a mix of antioxidants and vitamins that could help astronauts to combat the side effects of living in space.

Ten volunteers will lie in beds with the head end tilted down 6 degreesmedes-space-clinic-meal-bedrest-volunteerfor 60 days, keeping at least one shoulder on their bed at all times. Intense bedrest such is this is no fun: muscles and bones waste away, and the tilted beds makes blood and fluids move to the head - similar to the changes astronauts endure in space.

As all animals on Earth, humans have evolved to live in gravity so finding ways to stay healthy in weightlessness is important for further exploration of our Solar System. To test new exercise regimes, diets and understand what happens to astronauts, ESA conducts regular bedrest studies that simulate the effects of weightlessness on the human body.

For this study, run by the MEDES space clinic in Toulouse, France, volunteers are testing a vitamin and antioxidant cocktail that was suggested in a call for ideas held in 2011. An earlier 60-day session with 10 other volunteers was held from January to April. Fifteen experiments are being conducted at the same time, with half of the subjects acting as a control group - they will not get the cocktail.

ESA's head of human research for human spaceflight, Jennifer Ngo-Anh, says, "Bedrest studies are intense for everyone involved and require lots of preparation, but they offer a good way of testing the validity of new ideas before applying them to astronauts in space."

No easy lie-in
Spending 60 days in bed might sound easy, but finding the test subjects is not straightforward. Not only must they remove themselves from their normal daily commitments for 60 days, they also have no privacy and are subjected to rigorous sampling and tests such as muscle biopsies.

At the end of their horizontal adventure, they return to standing life weakened and out of shape.

To help the subjects regain their fitness, experts from ESA's astronaut centre in Germany, Cologne, will guide the participants through the same rehabilitation protocol that ESA astronauts follow when returning from the International Space Station.

Will the healthy cocktail reduce the inevitable ill effects of not stressing your body for 60 days? Researchers will publish their finding after the study.

In the meantime, ESA is already preparing for the next bedrest study with NASA, starting in August 2018 at the DLR German Aerospace Center's ':envihab' facility next to the European Astronaut Centre.

For those 60 days, researchers will test the effectiveness of artificial gravity in combating the symptoms of weightlessness by spinning the subjects in a centrifuge while still in bed.

SPACE MEDICINE
NASA's one-year mission investigates how space affects astronauts' functional performance
Houston TX (SPX) Sep 19, 2017
Adapting to the microgravity environment of space changes the way your brain interprets sensory signals, decreases muscle strength and alters cardiovascular function. Astronauts will need to overcome these changes to perform critical mission tasks on a journey to Mars. Simple tasks on Earth such as exiting a vehicle becomes more crucial when stepping foot in an unfamiliar world. Maintaining bala ... read more

Related Links
Bedrest studies at ESA
Space Medicine Technology and Systems


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