HUMAN CELLULAR IMMUNE RESPONSIVENESS FOLLOWING SPACE-FLIGHT
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 54 (12) , S55-S59
Abstract
Peripheral circulating lymphocytes were separated from astronaut blood samples 3 times before and 2 times after the first 4 USA Space Shuttle flights. The ability of the in vitro T lymphocytes to respond to phytohemagglutinin by blastogenesis was reduced for each crewmember following spaceflight. The astronauts experienced a postflight increase in neutrophils and a decrease in eosinophils. These postflight changes in leukocytes increased with subjectively-evaluated increases in the incidence of inflight stress, indicating that stress, and not hypogravity, is likely to be the major effector of these changes.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
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