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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Five male rats were dissected into three major compartments (musculo-skeletal system, skin, and pooled viscera) and compared with synchronous controls. The flight group show a 6.7% reduction in total body water probably attributable to a 36.2% reduction in the extracellular compartment, reductions of 6.6% in musculo-skeletal water and 17.2% in skin water, an apparent shift of some water from skin to viscera, and a 20% reduction in bone mineral mass. Among organ fresh masses there was a 7.5% increase in kidneys and a 14.0% decrease in spleen.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
    Type: NASA. Ames Research Center US Rat Expts. Flown in the Soviet Satellite Cosmos 1129; p 415-426
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: A study is described calling into question the hypothesis that an increased physical load during chronic centrifugation contributes to the body composition changes observed in centrifuged rats. Considering fat-free and fat-free dry masses of the total body and carcass, it is seen that centrifugation combined with either wheel running or restraint reduced these masses to approximately 85% of the respective 1-g values, that is, the same result with either sedentary rats or rats running several hundred meters per day. It is pointed out that if an effect of a centrifugation-induced load is present but hidden by opposing factors, an analysis of variance should reveal it as an interaction between acceleration and other variables; however, no such interactions are found here. Tables are included emphasizing the pervasive influence of chronic centrifugation after only 12 days exposure.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The effects of hypergravity (centrifugation) on body composition were investigated. Hypogravitational and hypergravitational aspects were reflected in the research effort. A list of publications is provided.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
    Type: NASA-CR-175393 , NAS 1.26:175393
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  • 4
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Studies of the centrifugation of adult rats showed an unexpected decrease in the mass of fat-free muscle and bone, in spite of the added load induced by centrifugation. It is suggested that the lower but constant fat-free body mass was probably regulated during centrifugation. Rats placed in weightless conditions for 18.5 days gave indirect but strong evidence that the muscle had increased in mass. Other changes in the rats placed in weightless conditions included a smaller fraction of skeletal mineral, a smaller fraction of water in the total fat-free body, and a net shift of fluid from skin to viscera. Adult rats centrifuged throughout the post-weaning growth period exhibited smaller masses of bone and central nervous system (probably attributable to slower growth of the total body), and a larger mass of skin than controls at 1 G. Efforts at simulating the effects of weightlessness or centrifugation on the body composition of rats by regimens at terrestrial gravity were inconclusive.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Six Simonsen albino rats (45 days of age) were placed on a regimen of 40 g/day the semipurified Soviet paste diet used in the 18.5 day Cosmos 1129 spacecraft was to support the rats for various experiments on the physiological effects of weightlessness. The animals were maintained on the Soviet paste diet for 35 days, metabolic rate was measured and body composition was determined by direct analysis. The results were compared with a control group of rates of the same age, which had been kept on a standard commercial grain diet during the same period of time.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
    Type: NASA-CR-164725 , EPL-81-1
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The effects of 18.5 days of weightlessness on the body composition of young, growing, male laboratory rats were examined. Three groups of 5 rats each were examined. It is indicated that exposure of young, growing, male rats to 18.5 days of weightlessness produces: (1) no effect on the quantity of fat stored by the body; (2) a slight reduction in the quantity of fat free tissue laid down by the body; (3) a small reduction in the fraction of water contained by the fat free body mass; (4) a similar reduction in the fraction of water contained by the fat free skin and fat free carcass; (5) a shift in relative distribution of the total body water from skin to viscera; (6) a diminution in the fraction of extracellular water contained by the fat free body; (7) no effect on the fraction of total skeletal musculature contained by the fat free body, as indicated by body creatine content; (8) a sizeable reduction in the fraction of bone mineral contained by the fat free body, as calculated from body calcium content. The nature of the physiological changes induced by unloading from Earth gravity in the mammalian organism are illustrated.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
    Type: NASA-CR-168678 , NAS 1.26:168678 , EPL-82-1
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  • 7
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    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The effects of exposure to an elevated g-level throughout the period of rapid growth is investigated in a comparison of a group of female Sprague-Dawley rats centrifuged as adults with other groups centrifuged for prolonged intervals starting shortly after weaning. The fluid-solid composition of total body, heart, liver, gut, skin, and muscle for both study groups is compared with that of a control group. None of the changes as a result of centrifugation were truly persistent. The only increases in mass associated with centrifugation and the only responses to centrifugation per se were observed in the skin values.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
    Type: Physiologist, Supplement (ISSN 0031-9376); 26; S-119
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The effects of weightlessness on the body composition of rats were investigated using 5 male rats exposed to 18.5 days of weightlessness on the COSMOS 1129 biosatellite and killed after reentry. The animals were immediately dissected and the three major body divisions (musculoskeletal system, skin, and pooled viscera) were analyzed for fat, water, solids, and six elements. These results were determined as percentages of the fat-free body or its components and then compared with two groups of terrestrial controls, one of which was subjected to a flight simulation in a spacecraft mock-up while the other was under standard vivarium conditions. Compared with the control groups, the flight group was found to exhibit a reduced fraction of total body water, a net shift of body water from skin to viscera, a marked diminution in the fraction of extracellular water in the fat-free body, a marked reduction in the fraction of bone mineral, no change in the quantity of stored fat or adrenal masses, and a net increase in total muscle mass as indicated by total body creatine, protein, and body cell mass.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
    Type: American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Interactive and Comparative Physiology (ISSN 0363-6119); 13; March 19
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Human circadian coronary circulatory rhythms during space flight weightlessness or bedrest with and without exercise
    Keywords: BIOTECHNOLOGY
    Type: ; YAL SOCIETY (
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  • 10
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    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Both new and published data (rats, mice, and human beings) on three parameters - fat mass, fat-free body mass (FFBM), and total body mass in some cases - are evaluated. Steady state values of the parameters are analyzed for changes in response to specific perturbing agents and for their frequency distributions. Temporal sequences of values on individuals are examined for evidence of regulatory responses. The results lead to the hypothesis that the FFBM is regulated, but probably not as a unit, and that mass of fat is regulated with a high priority near the range extremes but with a much lower priority in the mid-range. Properties and advantages of such a mechanism are discussed.
    Keywords: LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL)
    Type: Metabolism; 27; Apr. 197
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