Understanding and predicting the effects of spaceflight on the human
body can be challenging because humans have not spent enough time
in microgravity to accurately determine the risk of health problems
associated with exploration missions.
NASA planners developing concepts for longer, more physically
demanding missions need to better understand how human physiology
is altered during spaceflight. Such knowledge will
allow them to establish meaningful mission requirements for
health and safety. To this end, the NASA Human Research
Program Human Health Countermeasures Element chartered the
Digital Astronaut Project. Led out of the Glenn Research
Center, and in partnership with the Johnson Space Center,
the Digital Astronaut Project is an effort to utilize deterministic
simulations of human physiological function to answer targeted
questions about changes associated with the microgravity
environment.
The project is currently working in several areas, one of
which is quantifying the effects of exercise. In spite
of attempts to use exercise to counteract losses in bone
density and muscle tone during spaceflight, these problems
continue, with longer flights generally correlating with
greater loss. In an attempt to quantify the response
to exercise, project personnel created a model of the Advanced
Resistive Exercise Device (ARED) that astronauts currently
use on the International Space Station (ISS). In tandem
with that effort, the team also developed models of humans
performing ARED exercises. The team is currently integrating
both models, with a goal of quantifying muscle force and
joint torque produced by the exercise. Data produced
by these simulations will allow exercise physiologists to
design better exercise prescriptions for the astronauts.
In conjunction with the exercise models, project personnel
are also developing computational simulations of bone remodeling
and muscle function. In the case of bone, no current
analytic formulation is able to describe the effects of muscle
stress, strain, and gravitational loading on bone remodeling. Bone
tissue is actually in a perpetual state of flux, with old
tissue constantly being destroyed and new tissue created. In
healthy individuals living in earth’s gravity field, these
effects balance. In microgravity, however, tissue formation
in weight bearing regions of the skeleton slows dramatically,
leading to bone loss. These simulations should provide
key insight into how the turnover process proceeds in microgravity,
as well as providing recommendations for the daily amount
of loading required to counteract the effect.
While muscle models are more developed, computational tools
generally do not accurately predict microgravity effects,
which means that the team must alter the foundation of those
tools so that they can faithfully reflect the effects of
microgravity.
Finally, many astronauts return from space with vision changes,
presumably caused by an increase in cerebral-spinal fluid
pressure. This pressure change is likely a result of
the well-known head ward fluid shift that occurs as soon
as humans enter microgravity. Project personnel are
currently conducting a survey to determine what computational
tools and data sets are available to simulate this problem. When
that survey is complete, the team will use a combination
of existing and custom tools to develop a simulation quantifing
this effect.
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