空间演习:欧洲航天局对国际空间站长期任务的飞行演习对抗措施的方法。

Extreme physiology & medicine Pub Date : 2016-08-02 eCollection Date: 2016-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s13728-016-0050-4
Nora Petersen, Patrick Jaekel, Andre Rosenberger, Tobias Weber, Jonathan Scott, Filippo Castrucci, Gunda Lambrecht, Lori Ploutz-Snyder, Volker Damann, Inessa Kozlovskaya, Joachim Mester
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引用次数: 107

摘要

背景:为了抵消微重力(µG)诱导的适应,欧洲航天局(ESA)在国际空间站(ISS)执行长期任务(ldm)的宇航员每天都要进行体育锻炼对抗计划。自2006年第一位欧空局成员完成LDM以来,欧空局的对策项目一直致力于在国际空间站环境的操作限制和机载运动设备的可用性变化下,提供有效的保护,防止体重、肌肉力量、骨量和有氧能力的减少。本文的目的是提供ESA对飞行中运动对策的个性化方法的描述,以及如何使用运动来抵消由µg诱导的适应引起的生理变化的最新图景。介绍了欧空局8个ldm中阻力运动、跑步机运动和周期几何的绝对工作量变化,并概述了飞行前身体准备和飞行后恢复的各个方面。结果:随着2009年先进阻力运动装置(ARED)的引入,阻力运动对飞行总运动的相对贡献增加(33- 46%),而跑步机运动(42- 33%)和周期几何运动(26- 20%)则下降。欧空局所有8名机组人员在ldm期间都增加了他们在飞行中的绝对工作量,以进行阻力运动和跑步机跑步(跑步速度和通过安全带的垂直载荷),而在不同的任务中,循环测力仪的工作量没有变化。结论:飞行中绝对运动负荷的增加或不变与典型的飞行后肌肉质量和力量以及ldm后心血管容量的减少相矛盾。然而,飞行中绝对工作量的增加与运动能力的变化没有直接联系,因为它们也可能反映了任务早期计划的保守负荷,以便适应μ G运动,包括使用新型运动硬件(例如跑步机安全带)的个人舒适度问题。硬件和个性化支持概念在时间上的不一致性限制了不同机组人员结果的可比性,以及关于在µG环境下骑车和跑步与在地球上进行相同锻炼之间的差异的问题,以及其他可能影响飞行中锻炼表现的因素,仍需要进一步调查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Exercise in space: the European Space Agency approach to in-flight exercise countermeasures for long-duration missions on ISS.

Exercise in space: the European Space Agency approach to in-flight exercise countermeasures for long-duration missions on ISS.

Exercise in space: the European Space Agency approach to in-flight exercise countermeasures for long-duration missions on ISS.

Exercise in space: the European Space Agency approach to in-flight exercise countermeasures for long-duration missions on ISS.

Background: To counteract microgravity (µG)-induced adaptation, European Space Agency (ESA) astronauts on long-duration missions (LDMs) to the International Space Station (ISS) perform a daily physical exercise countermeasure program. Since the first ESA crewmember completed an LDM in 2006, the ESA countermeasure program has strived to provide efficient protection against decreases in body mass, muscle strength, bone mass, and aerobic capacity within the operational constraints of the ISS environment and the changing availability of on-board exercise devices. The purpose of this paper is to provide a description of ESA's individualised approach to in-flight exercise countermeasures and an up-to-date picture of how exercise is used to counteract physiological changes resulting from µG-induced adaptation. Changes in the absolute workload for resistive exercise, treadmill running and cycle ergometry throughout ESA's eight LDMs are also presented, and aspects of pre-flight physical preparation and post-flight reconditioning outlined.

Results: With the introduction of the advanced resistive exercise device (ARED) in 2009, the relative contribution of resistance exercise to total in-flight exercise increased (33-46 %), whilst treadmill running (42-33 %) and cycle ergometry (26-20 %) decreased. All eight ESA crewmembers increased their in-flight absolute workload during their LDMs for resistance exercise and treadmill running (running speed and vertical loading through the harness), while cycle ergometer workload was unchanged across missions.

Conclusion: Increased or unchanged absolute exercise workloads in-flight would appear contradictory to typical post-flight reductions in muscle mass and strength, and cardiovascular capacity following LDMs. However, increased absolute in-flight workloads are not directly linked to changes in exercise capacity as they likely also reflect the planned, conservative loading early in the mission to allow adaption to µG exercise, including personal comfort issues with novel exercise hardware (e.g. the treadmill harness). Inconsistency in hardware and individualised support concepts across time limit the comparability of results from different crewmembers, and questions regarding the difference between cycling and running in µG versus identical exercise here on Earth, and other factors that might influence in-flight exercise performance, still require further investigation.

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