乘员人口统计因素及其与太空飞行后大脑和眼部变化的关系。

IF 4.1 1区 物理与天体物理 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Heather R McGregor, Kathleen E Hupfeld, Ofer Pasternak, Nichole E Beltran, Yiri E De Dios, Jacob J Bloomberg, Scott J Wood, Roy F Riascos, Patricia A Reuter-Lorenz, Rachael D Seidler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

越来越多的人在太空旅行的时间比以往任何时候都长。许多长时间飞行的人表现出与太空飞行相关的神经-眼综合征(SANS)的迹象。对SANS的机制和预测因素的更深入的了解可能会导致新的、更个性化的对策。我们的目的是确定太空飞行中大脑和眼睛的变化是否相互相关和/或与机组人员的人口统计因素有关,包括性别、年龄、体重指数和先前的太空飞行经验。我们在一项队列研究中评估了大脑变化和眼部变化的关联以及变化的预测模型。我们的样本包括30名有脑部MRI但没有眼部指标的机组人员,37名有眼部但没有脑部MRI的机组人员,22名有两组数据的机组人员。每个样本中大约有25%的参与者是女性。从飞行前到飞行后,女性大脑顶点周围的自由水分减少比男性多。虽然没有统计学意义,但男性出现SANS症状的比值比大约是女性的三倍。与过去的小型研究不同,我们发现大脑变化与SANS症状的发展之间没有联系。对这些发现的解释应该考虑到我们的样本中包含相对较少的女性这一事实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Crewmember demographic factors and their association with brain and ocular changes following spaceflight.

Crewmember demographic factors and their association with brain and ocular changes following spaceflight.

Crewmember demographic factors and their association with brain and ocular changes following spaceflight.

Crewmember demographic factors and their association with brain and ocular changes following spaceflight.

More people are traveling to space for longer durations than ever before. Many long-duration flyers exhibit signs of Spaceflight Associated Neuro-ocular Syndrome (SANS). A greater understanding of the mechanisms and predictors of SANS may lead to new, more individually tailored countermeasures. Our objective here was to determine whether brain and ocular changes with spaceflight are related to each other and/or to crewmember demographic factors, including sex, age, body mass index, and prior spaceflight experience. We assessed brain change and ocular change associations and predictive models of changes in a cohort study. Our samples included 30 crewmembers with brain MRI but not ocular metrics, 37 with ocular but not brain MRI, and 22 with both sets of data. Approximately 25% of participants in each of these samples were female. Females showed greater free water reduction around the vertex of the brain from pre- to postflight than males. While not statistically significant, the odds ratio of males developing signs of SANS was approximately three times higher than for females. Unlike in past smaller studies, we found no association between brain changes and the development of signs of SANS. Interpretation of these findings should be tempered by the fact that our sample included a relatively small number of females.

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来源期刊
npj Microgravity
npj Microgravity Physics and Astronomy-Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
7.80%
发文量
50
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: A new open access, online-only, multidisciplinary research journal, npj Microgravity is dedicated to publishing the most important scientific advances in the life sciences, physical sciences, and engineering fields that are facilitated by spaceflight and analogue platforms.
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