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Aviat Space Envir Md · May 2009
Long-duration head-down bed rest: project overview, vital signs, and fluid balance.
- Janice V Meck, Sherlene A Dreyer, and L Elisabeth Warren.
- HumanAdaptation and Countermeasures Division, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX 77058, USA. janice.v.meck@nasa.gov
- Aviat Space Envir Md. 2009 May 1; 80 (5 Suppl): A1-8.
IntroductionSpaceflight has profound effects on the human body. Many of these effects can be induced with head-down bed rest, which has been a useful ground-based analog. With limited resources aboard the International Space Station for human research, the bed rest analog will be a primary platform on which countermeasures will be developed and tested for lunar and Mars mission scenarios.MethodsNASA Johnson Space Center, in conjunction with the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB), has created the NASA Flight Analogs Project (FAP), a research program with the overall objective of using head-down bed rest to evaluate, compare, and refine candidate countermeasures to spaceflight deconditioning. This paper serves as an overview and describes the standard conditions, the standard set of subject screening criteria, and the standard set of measurements for all FAP bed rest subjects.ResultsHeart rate and diastolic pressures decreased transiently at the onset of bed rest. Fluid balance showed an early diuresis, which stabilized within 3 d. In this supplement, detailed results from multiple disciplines are presented in a series of reports.DiscussionThe following reports describe multi-disciplinary results from the standard measurements by which the responses to bed rest will be assessed and by which countermeasures will be evaluated. The data presented in this overview are meant to serve as a context in which to view the data presented in the discipline specific manuscripts. The dietary support and behavioral health papers provide additional information regarding those aspects of implementing bed rest studies successfully.
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