Acute Hemodynamic Responses to Weightlessness in Humans
- 1 July 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
- Vol. 29 (7) , 615-627
- https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1552-4604.1989.tb03390.x
Abstract
As NASA designs space flights requiring prolonged periods of weightlessness for a broader segment of the population, it will be important to know the acute and sustained effects of weightlessness on the cardiovascular system since this information will contribute to understanding of the clinical pharmacology of drugs administered in space. Due to operational constraints on space flights, earliest effects of weightlessness have not been documented. We examined hemodynamic responses of humans to transitions from acceleration to weightlessness during parabolic flight on NASA's KC‐135 aircraft. Impedance cardiography data were collected over four sets of 8–10 parabolas, with a brief rest period between sets. Each parabola included a period of 1.8 Gz, then approximately 20 seconds of weightlessness, and finally a period of 1.6 Gz; the cycle repeated almost immediately for the remainder of the set. Subjects were semi‐supine (Shuttle launch posture) for the first set, then randomly supine, sitting and standing for each subsequent set. Transition to weightlessness while standing produced decreased heart rate, increased thoracic fluid content, and increased stroke index. Surprisingly, the onset of weightlessness in the semi‐supine posture produced little evidence of a headword fluid shift. Heart rate, stroke index, and cardiac index are virtually unchanged after 20 seconds of weightlessness, and thoracic fluid content is slightly decreased. Semi‐supine responses run counter to Shuttle crewmember reports of noticeable fluid shift after minutes to hours in orbit. Apparently, the headword fluid shift commences in the semi‐supine posture before launch,1 is augmented by launch acceleration, but briefly interrupted immediately in orbit, then resumes and is completed over the next hours.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Chronic Timolol in an Animal Model for Myocardial InfarctionThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1988
- The effect of intracerebroventricular D-ALA2 methionine enkephalinamide and naloxone on cardiovascular parameters in the catLife Sciences, 1988
- The Effect of Beta Blockers on Cardiac Neural Discharge Associated with Coronary Occlusion in the CatThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1987
- The role of enkephalins in the production of epileptogenic activity and autonomic dysfunction: Origin of arrhythmia and sudden death in the epileptic patients?Medical Hypotheses, 1987
- Cardiac Arrhythmia, Sudden Death, and Psychoactive AgentsThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1987
- The effect of acute and chronic administration of timolol on cardiac sympathetic neural discharge, arrhythmia, and beta adrenergic receptor density associated with coronary occlusion in the catLife Sciences, 1986
- The Effect of C1 Spinal Cord Transection or Bilateral Adrenal Vein Ligation on Thioridazine‐Induced Arrhythmia and Death in the CatThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1986
- The long-term increase of baseline and reflexly augmented levels of human vagal-cardiac nervous activity induced by scopolamine.Circulation, 1985
- Neural mechanisms in cardiac arrhythmias associated with epileptogenic activity: The effect of phenobarbital in the catLife Sciences, 1984
- Nonuniform cardiac sympathetic nerve discharge: mechanism for coronary occlusion and digitalis-induced arrhythmia.Circulation, 1978