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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The effect of the lower body positive pressure (LBPP) on kidney function in normal men was investigated in experiments in which the subjects underwent 30 min of sitting and then were subjected to 4.5 h of 70-deg head-up tilt. During the last 3 h of the tilt period, an antigravity suit (60 T legs, 30 T abdomen) was applied. The results showed that LBPP induces a significant increase in effective renal plasma flow and significant changes in the kidney excretory patterns, which were similar to those observed during a water immersion or the early phase of bed rest.
    Keywords: AEROSPACE MEDICINE
    Type: Journal of Applied Physiology (ISSN 0161-7567); 66; 792-799
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The hypothesis that reducing muscle compartment by a long-term exposure to microgravity would cause increased leg venous compliance was tested in eight men who were assessed for vascular compliance and for serial circumferences of the calf before and after 30 days of continuous 6-deg head-down bed rest. It was found that head-down bed rest caused decreases in the calculated calf volume and the calf-muscle compartment, as well as increases in calf compliance. The percent increases in calf compliance correlated significantly with decreases in calf muscle compartment.
    Keywords: AEROSPACE MEDICINE
    Type: Journal of Applied Physiology (ISSN 0161-7567); 66; 1509-151
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Because of their erect posture, humans are more vulnerable to gravitational changes than any other animal. During standing or walking man must constantly use his antigravity muscles and his two columns, his legs, to balance against the force of gravity. At the same time, blood is surging downward to the dependent portions of the body, draining blood away from the brain and heart, and requiring a series of complex cardiovascular adjustments to maintain the human in a bipedal position. It was not until 12 April 1961, when Yuri Gagarin became the first human being to orbit Earth, that we could confirm man's ability to maintain vital functions in space -- at least for 90 min. Nevertheless, man's adaptation to weightlessness entails the deconditioning of various organs in the body. Muscles atrophy, and calcium loss leads to loss of bone strength as the demands on the musculoskeletal system are almost nonexistent in weightlessness. Because of the lack of hydrostatic pressures in space, blood rushes to the upper portions of the body, initiating a complex series of cardioregulatory responses. Deconditioning during spaceflight, however, first becomes a potentially serious problem in humans returning to Earth, when the cardiovascular system, muscles and bones are suddenly exposed to the demanding counterforce of gravity -- weight. One of the main purposes of our studies was to test the feasibility of using Lower Body Positive Pressure, applied with an antigravity suit, as a new and alternative technique to bed rest and water immersion for studying cardioregulatory, renal, electrolyte, and hormonal changes in humans. The results suggest that Lower Body Positive Pressure can be used as an analog of microgravity-induced physiological responses in humans.
    Keywords: AEROSPACE MEDICINE
    Type: NASA-TM-102232 , A-89084 , NAS 1.15:102232
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: To investigate the relationship between leg compliance and a reduction in the size of the leg muscle compartment due to long-duration exposure to microgravity, eight men were exposed for 30 d of continuous 6-deg headdown tilt, and changes in vascular compliance (vol pct/mm Hg x 100) of the calf and serial circumferences of the thigh and the calf were measured before, during, and after the tilt. It was found that the tilt exposure led to calculated leg volume decreases of 9.9 percent in the calf and of 4.5 in the thigh. Leg compliance was found to increase from 3.9 to about 4.9. Calf compliance measured before and after bedrest was found to be inversely related to calf-muscle compartment cross-sectional area (CSA).
    Keywords: AEROSPACE MEDICINE
    Type: Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine (ISSN 0095-6562); 60; 653-658
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