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Space Medicine Fundamentals of Space Medicine — Chapter 7 1 Operational Space Medicine Douglas Hamilton, M.D, Ph.D Star Trek TV Series. Photo Paramount Pictures Wyle Laboratories NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, USA Kluwer Academic Publishers • Copyright © 2003 • All rights reserved Space Medicine Key Concepts • Space medicine: What is it? • What are the health hazards of spaceflight. Comparison with analog environments • Medical selection of astronauts and prevention of health hazards • In-flight countermeasures • Treatment of medical events in space. The onsite medical facility. Emergency and rescue 2 Space Medicine Space Medicine 3 • What it is – It involves proactive and reactive care of humans to optimize physical, physiological, and mental well-being, within the unique constraints of an extreme environment • What it isn’t – Space Medicine is different from Space Physiology – Many aspects of adaptation to weightlessness are peculiarities, not necessarily pathology – Even if not pathological, changes may alter the way a disease presents or may increase risks for a given medical problem Photo NASA Space Medicine Space Medicine “Your neuro-vestibular, cardio-vascular, and musculoskeletal systems can’t support you anymore.” 4 Space Medicine Operational Space Medicine • Selection and Prevention are the primary means of maintaining crew health and performance • Countermeasures are used when Selection and Prevention are unable to mitigate the deleterious effects of spaceflight • Treatment is used when Selection, Prevention, and Countermeasures are unable to prevent or mitigate illness or injury • Rehabilitation: return to flight status 5 Space Medicine History of Space Medicine 6 Photos NASA Space Medicine Astronaut Selection • Medical history • Examination – Physical exam – Cardio-pulmonary – Ear-Nose-Throat – Ophtalmological – Dental – Neurological – Psychiatric – Radiographic – Laboratory • Others – U.S.: • Drug screen, microbiological, pregnancy, STD – Russia: • Decompression and hypoxia • Centrifuge for +Gz and +Gx resistance • Rotating chair • Tilt table studies • LBNP • Heat stress • Parabolic flight 7 Space Medicine Astronaut Training 8 Photo NASA Emergency egress training Jet training Photo CNES Photos NASA Medical training Water training Space Medicine Risk Assessment • Most tests have a poor ability for detecting the presence of disease in very healthy individuals • There are almost no tests which are designed to select-out the occurrence of pathology (illness) over the next three years. This is a problem for selecting a crew for a Mars Mission • All risks cannot be predicted Movie: 09_AlienSong 9 Space Medicine Common Medical Events 10 • Space Motion Sickness: count on 50-70% • Foreign bodies in the eye: particles do not “settle out” • Decompression-related disorders: especially with active EVA schedule • Toxic inhalation: e.g. from chemicals/reagents involved in investigations, pyrolysis products from fire, propellants • Kidney stones: risk due to mobilization of calcium from skeleton, and possibly other factors • Radiation: identified as the major career-limiting exposure for astronauts Photo NASA Space Medicine Less Likely Medical Events • Cardiovascular events: rigorous screening process during astronaut selection, flight certification • Major fractures: largely, forces which lead to such events terrestrially, such as vehicle accidents and falls, not present • Infectious disease: after a certain disease free “incubation period” no new pathogens introduced into a small group (however, there are also immune system changes with unclear effects on overall risk) Note: all the above represents a large portion of events prompting visits to medical care facilities on Earth 11 Space Medicine Source of Ionizing Radiation in Space • Solar energetic particles emitted from the sun during solar flares • Particles trapped by the Earth’s magnetic field in the Van Allen belts, • Galactic cosmic radiation which crosses the galaxy Each of these sources consists of all the types of space radiation, but at different energies and in different relative proportions 12 Space Medicine Dose (Sv) 0.1-0.5 0.1-1 1-2 2-3.5 3.5-5.5 5.5-7.5 7.5-10 10-20 45 Acute Radiation Syndrome Probable Medical Effects No effects except minor blood changes 5-10% subjects experience nausea or vomiting, fatigue for 1-2 days, slight reduction in white blood cells 25-50% nausea/vomiting, with some other symptoms, 50% reduction in white blood cells 75-100% nausea/vomiting, fever, with anorexia, diarrhea, minor bleeding, 75% reduction in all blood elements. 5-50% subjects will die 100% nausea/vomiting, fever, bleeding diarrhea, emaciation. Death of 50-90% in 6 weeks. Survivors require 6 months convalescence 100% nausea/vomiting in 4 hours. 80-100% die Severe nausea/vomiting for 3 days. Death within 2.5 weeks Nausea/vomiting within 1 hour. 100% die within less than 2 weeks Incapacitation within hours. 100% die within 1 week 13 Space Medicine Radiation Exposure • Exposure Limits for Ionizing Radiation BFO Eye 30 Days 0.25 1 Annual 0.5 2 Career 1-4* 4 14 Skin 1.5 3 6 *The career dose-equivalent (in Sievert, Sv) is based upon a maximum 3% lifetime risk of cancer mortality. BFO: blood-forming organs • Measured Radiation Dose during Spaceflight Mission Absorbed Dose(mGy) Dose Equivalent (Sv) Space Shuttle 2-4 0.005 Sv (7-day mission orbiting Earth at <450 km) Space Shuttle 5.2 0.05 Sv (8-day mission orbiting Earth at >450 km) Apollo-14 11.4 0.03 Sv 77.4 0.178 Sv (9-day mission to the Moon) Skylab-4 (84-day mission orbiting Earth at 430 km, 28.5 deg inclination) Mir 146 0.584 Sv (1-year mission orbiting Earth at 400 km, 51.5 deg inclination) Space Medicine Radiation Shielding 15 • Effects of a Solar Flare Event with 2 g/cm2 shielding (Aug’72) Time 06:21 13:00 14:00 15:00 16:00 17:00 Event Optical flare observed 30-day limit exceeded for skin and optical lens 30-day limit exceeded for BFO; annual limit exceeded for lens Annual limit exceeded for skin Annual exceeded for BFO; Career exceeded for lens Career limit exceeded for skin • Time to reach 30-day limit (hours) Shield Thickness 0.2 (g/cm2) 1.0 (g/cm2) 5.0 (g/cm2) BFO 6.0 6.3 8.9 Skin 3.0 3.5 8.0 Lens 1.9 2.4 6.5 Photo NASA Space Medicine Rules in Space Medicine 16 • “Common things occur commonly” • Mission-specific operational hazards: e.g., harmful environment, toxic substances, etc. • Injury / illness is occurring in a body which is adapting to microgravity • Manpower is in short supply • In-flight, the crew is on its own with limited support from Earth Photo CNES Space Medicine Medical Hardware Selection 17 • Weight/volume: as small and compact as possible • Simple and intuitive to use; training will be limited • Power/data needs: add immensely to complexity; non-powered if possible • Long shelf-life, "bullet proof” technology desired • Supports identified standards of care; must meets clinical management analysis, e.g. provides useful information • Modular, easy to replace and upgrade components • Think 0-G or partial G as needed Photo NASA Space Medicine ISS Crew Health Care System (CHeCS) • Environmental • Health Maintenance System Health System – Body Restraint System • Countermeasures – Cardiac defibrillator – Advanced Life Support Pack – Human Research Facility • Gas Analyzer System • Heart and vascular ultrasound • Abdominal ultrasound, deep organ • Gynecological ultrasound • Muscle and tendon ultrasound • Transcranial ultrasound Movie: 18_lungs 18 First ultrasound examination (lungs) performed on board the ISS. Documents NASA System – Treadmill – Cycle ergometer – Resistive exercise Space Medicine Examples of Flight Medical Hardware • Cardiac Defibrillator / Monitor Photo NASA – Early electrical defibrillation correlates best with survival in event of cardiac arrest (many roads to ventricular fibrillation) – It is no longer simple to apply force to defibrillator paddles; adhesive conductive pads are used – Must provide insulation from delivered voltage and consider effects of electromagnetic interference (EMI) on sensitive avionics 19 Space Medicine Examples of Flight Medical Hardware • Advanced Life Support Pack Photos NASA – Accessibility and use strongly influence success / survival – Medical waste, e.g., sharp needles must be carefully disposed – Medications must be tracked and discarded when shelf-life exceeded – Absorption of oral medications may be sensitive to digestive function, which may be altered in space – Alternate routes of administration may be better for some drugs (intramuscular, intravenous, nasal) 20 Space Medicine Advanced Life Support Pack Deployment and utilization of the Advanced Life Support Pack on board the ISS Movie: 21_contingency Document NASA 21 Space Medicine Telemedicine 22 Injured or ill Crewmember Onboard Medical Care Facility Care Medical Officer (CMO) Telemedicine Link Engineering Support Crew Surgeon Consultants Space Medicine Telemedicine Pack 23 • Voice / video communications both ways (private medical conferences, diagnostic and procedural aid) • Continuous physiological monitoring (eases requirements on crew; ground personnel can analyze trends) • Video Imaging – Eye – Ear, nose, throat – Skin • Biomedical Monitoring – ECG – SpO2 – Blood pressure – Heart rate • Electronic Stethoscope – Heart, lung, and bowel sounds Photo NASA Space Medicine Emergency and Rescue • Response to an orbital medical event depends on 5 factors: – Severity of illness / injury – Capability of onboard medical system – Ability of surgeon to assist during medical event – Level of skill / training of onboard medical officer – Ease / feasibility of medical evacuation to Earth • Crew Medical Officer – 3 -7 crewmembers on ISS – Crew Medical Officer (CMO) on ISS is usually not a physician – CMO receives 40-60 hours of medical training completed at least 3 months prior to flight – Trained to recognize, treat, and stabilized acute injury – Trained to prepare patient for transport 24 Space Medicine Treatment • Treatment structure highly desirable • Requires means of transporting patient • Necessary medical hardware in proximity • Restraint function integrated with diagnostic and therapeutic systems • Some new procedures need to be adapted for microgravity (e.g., CPR) Movie: 25_restraint Documents NASA 25 Space Medicine Surgery in Space 26 • Operator and patient restraints • Instrument deployment and fixation • Sterile environment – Increased population of antibiotic resistant bacteria – Decreased immune function documented in space • Lighting and exposure • Control of atmosphere contamination (bleeding) • Decreased proprioceptive (muscle and skin) sensation • Time delay for telesurgery Photo NASA Space Medicine Emergencies — Soyuz Photos NASA 27 Space Medicine Emergencies — Egress Photos NASA 28 Space Medicine Additional Reading • Billica RD, Simmons SC, Mather KL, et al. (1996) Perception of the • • • • • • medical risk of spaceflight. Aviat Space Environ Med 67: 467-473 Clément G (2003) Fundamentals of Space Medicine. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers Lane HW, Schoeller D (eds) (1999) Nutrition in Spaceflight and Weightless Models. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press Wilson WJ, Miller J, Konradi A, Cucinotta FA (eds) (1997) Shielding Strategies for Human Space Exploration. NASA CP-3360 Washington, DC: NASA Institute of Medicine (2001) Safe Passage: Astronaut Care for Exploration Missions. Ball HR, Evans CH, Ballard JR (eds) Washington, DC: National Academy Press International Workshop on Human Factors in Space. Aviat Space Environ Med 71, Number 9, Section II (Supplement) 2000 National Research Council (1996) Radiation Hazards to Crews of Interplanetary Missions. Task Group on the Biological Effects of Space Radiation. Washington, DC: National Academy Press 29