[94]
Artificial
Gravity as a Multi-System Countermeasure to Bed Rest Deconditioning:
Preliminary Results. L.E. Warren1, W.H. Paloski2,
and L.R. Young3 1Universities
Space Research Association, Houston, TX, 2Human Adaptation
&
Countermeasures Office, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX, and 3Man
Vehicle Laboratory (37-219), Department of Aeronautics and
Astronautics,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA.
Artificial
gravity paradigms
may offer effective, efficient, multi-system protection from the
untoward
effects of adaptation to the microgravity of space or the hypogravity
of
planetary surfaces. Intermittent artificial gravity (AG) produced by a
horizontal short-radius centrifuge (SRC) has recently been utilized on
human
test subjects deconditioned by bed rest. This presentation will review
preliminary results of a 41 day study conducted at the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX bed rest facility. During the first eleven
days of
the protocol, subjects were ambulatory, but confined to the facility.
They
began a carefully controlled diet, and participated in multiple
baseline tests
of bone, muscle, cardiovascular, sensory-motor, immunological, and
psychological function. On the twelfth day, subjects entered the bed
rest phase
of the study, during which they were confined to strict 6˚ head down
tilt bed
rest for 21 days. Beginning 24 hrs into this period, treatment subjects
received one hour daily exposures to artificial gravity which was
produced by
spinning the subjects on a 3.0 m radius SRC. They were oriented
radially in the
supine position so that the centrifugal force was aligned with their
long body
axis, and while spinning, they “stood” on a force plate, supporting the
centrifugal loading (2.5 g at the feet, 1.0 g at the heart). The
subject
station allowed free translation over approximately 10 cm to ensure
full
loading of the lower extremities and to allow for anti-orthostatic
muscle
contractions. Control subjects were positioned on the centrifuge but
did not
spin. Following the bed rest phase,
subjects were allowed to ambulate again, but remained within the
facility for
an additional 9 days and participated in multiple follow-up tests of
physiological function. (Supported by
NASA and NIH GCRC).