Tolerance of centrifuge-simulated suborbital spaceflight by medical condition.

Rebecca S Blue, James M Pattarini, David P Reyes, Robert A Mulcahy, Alejandro Garbino, Charles H Mathers, Johnené L Vardiman, Tarah L Castleberry, James M Vanderploeg
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引用次数: 39

Abstract

Introduction: We examined responses of volunteers with known medical disease to G forces in a centrifuge to evaluate how potential commercial spaceflight participants (SFPs) might tolerate the forces of spaceflight despite significant medical history.

Methods: Volunteers were recruited based upon suitability for each of five disease categories (hypertension, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, lung disease, back or neck problems) or a control group. Subjects underwent seven centrifuge runs over 2 d. Day 1 consisted of two +G(z) runs (peak = +3.5 G(z), Run 2) and two +G(x), runs (peak = +6.0 G(x), Run 4). Day 2 consisted of three runs approximating suborbital spaceflight profiles (combined +G(x) and +G(z), peak = +6.0 G(x)/+4.0 G(z)). Data collected included blood pressure, electrocardiogram, pulse oximetry, neurovestibular exams, and post-run questionnaires regarding motion sickness, disorientation, grayout, and other symptoms.

Results: A total of 335 subjects registered for participation, of which 86 (63 men, 23 women, age 20-78 yr) participated in centrifuge trials. The most common causes for disqualification were weight and severe and uncontrolled medical or psychiatric disease. Five subjects voluntarily withdrew from the second day of testing: three for anxiety reasons, one for back strain, and one for time constraints. Maximum hemodynamic values recorded included HR of 192 bpm, systolic BP of 217 mmHg, and diastolic BP of 144 mmHg. Common subjective complaints included grayout (69%), nausea (20%), and chest discomfort (6%). Despite their medical history, no subject experienced significant adverse physiological responses to centrifuge profiles.

Discussion: These results suggest that most individuals with well-controlled medical conditions can withstand acceleration forces of launch and re-entry profiles of current commercial spaceflight vehicles.

医疗条件下离心模拟亚轨道航天飞行的公差。
简介:我们在离心机中检测了已知患有医学疾病的志愿者对重力的反应,以评估潜在的商业航天参与者(SFPs)在有严重病史的情况下如何忍受太空飞行的力。方法:根据五种疾病类别(高血压、心血管疾病、糖尿病、肺病、背部或颈部问题)或对照组的适合性招募志愿者。受试者在2天内进行了7次离心运行。第1天包括两次+G(z)运行(峰值= +3.5 G(z),运行2)和两次+G(x)运行(峰值= +6.0 G(x),运行4)。第2天包括三次近似亚轨道航天飞行曲线的运行(+G(x)和+G(z)组合,峰值= +6.0 G(x)/+4.0 G(z))。收集的数据包括血压、心电图、脉搏血氧测定、神经前庭检查,以及跑步后关于晕车、定向障碍、脑灰和其他症状的问卷调查。结果:共有335名受试者注册参与,其中86名(男性63名,女性23名,年龄20-78岁)参加了离心机试验。取消资格的最常见原因是体重和严重且无法控制的医疗或精神疾病。5名受试者自愿退出第二天的测试:3名因焦虑原因,1名因背部拉伤,1名因时间限制。记录的最大血流动力学值包括心率192 bpm,收缩压217 mmHg,舒张压144 mmHg。常见的主观主诉包括脸色灰白(69%)、恶心(20%)和胸部不适(6%)。尽管他们有病史,但没有受试者对离心机档案有明显的不良生理反应。讨论:这些结果表明,大多数具有良好控制医疗条件的个人能够承受当前商业航天飞行器发射和再入轮廓的加速度力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Aviation, space, and environmental medicine
Aviation, space, and environmental medicine 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
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