• Am. J. Med. Sci. · Jul 2007

    Review

    Plasma and blood volume in space.

    • André Diedrich, Sachin Y Paranjape, and David Robertson.
    • Center for Space Medicine and Physiology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, Autonomic Dysfunction Center, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-2195, USA. andre.diedrich@vanderbilt.edu
    • Am. J. Med. Sci. 2007 Jul 1; 334 (1): 80-5.

    AbstractBody fluid regulation is affected by gravity. The primary mechanisms of the etiology of hypovolemia found in simulation studies on earth and after space flight are different. The increased diuresis after increase of central blood volume postulated by Henry Gauer could not be found. Based on recent findings, new hypotheses about fluid volume regulation during space flight have emerged. The reduced blood volume in space is the result of 1) a negative balance of decreased fluid intake and smaller reduction of urine output; 2) fast fluid shifts from the intravascular to interstitial space as the result of lower transmural pressure after reduced compression of all tissue by gravitational forces especially of the thorax cage; and 3) fluid shifts from intravascular to muscle interstitial space because of less muscle tone required to maintain body posture. Additionally, loss of erythrocytes reduces blood volume. The attenuated diuresis during space flight can be explained by increased retention after stress-mediated sympathetic activation during initial phase of space flight, stimulation caused by reduced red cell mass, and activation after fast blood volume contraction. Additionally, the relation between plasma osmolarity and vasopressin release might be disturbed in microgravity.

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