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Artificial gravity: a possible countermeasure for post-flight orthostatic intolerance
Authors:Moore Steven T  Diedrich André  Biaggioni Italo  Kaufmann Horacio  Raphan Theodore  Cohen Bernard
Institution:

aDepartment of Neurology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Box 1135, 1 E 100th St., New York, NY 10029, USA

bVanderbilt University Medical Center, AA3228 MCN, 1161 21st Ave South, Nashville, TN 37232-2195, USA

cDepartment of Computer and Information Science, Brooklyn College, 2900 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11210, USA

dDepartment of Physiology and Biophysics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Box 1135, 1E 100th St., New York, NY 10029, USA

Abstract:Four payload crewmembers were exposed to sustained linear acceleration in a centrifuge during the Neurolab (STS-90) flight. In contrast to previous studies, otolith–ocular reflexes were preserved during and after flight. This raised the possibility that artificial gravity may have acted as a countermeasure to the deconditioning of otolith–ocular reflexes. None of the astronauts who were centrifuged had orthostatic intolerance when tested with head-up passive tilt after flight. Thus, centrifugation may also have helped maintain post-flight hemodynamic responses to orthostasis by preserving the gain of the otolith–sympathetic reflex. A comparison with two fellow Neurolab orbiter crewmembers not exposed to artificial gravity provided some support for this hypothesis. One of the two had hemodynamic changes in response to post-flight tilt similar to orthostatically intolerant subjects from previous missions. More data is necessary to evaluate this hypothesis, but if it were proven correct, in-flight short-radius centrifugation may help counteract orthostatic intolerance after space flight.
Keywords:
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