The subject of analysis was the data on +3 and +5 Gz tolerance of 130 civilian non-pilot applicants for cosmonauts (men and women, aged 23 to 55) gathered over the past 30 years. Length of the centrifuge arm was 7.25 meters and the total number of primary centrifuge runs was 309.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnalysis of +Gx tolerance of 15 members of short-term ISS missions and 9 members of long-term ISS missions aboard the Soyuz vehicles showed good tolerance during insertion and satisfactory during descent provided the use of in-flight countermeasures and anti-g suit Kentaur inside the vehicle. Objective data about the tolerance of off-nominal +Gx (6.26 and 8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiological reactions of four cosmonauts to +Gx during the descent after short-term (less than 30 d) space flights were correlated with the hemodynamic shifts developed previously during the LBNP test and occlusive plethysmography in microgravity. The cosmonauts who had exhibited a sharp decrease in cerebral circulation during the in-flight LBNP tests showed signs of deteriorated cerebral blood flow (vertigo, weakness, hyperhydration) at the attempt to assume the vertical posture and to climb out of the landing module. Also, the cosmonauts found to have the arterial and venous tone significantly dropped in microgravity, suffered petechial hemorrhages in the back integument during the exposure to +Gx.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEffects of prophylactic device Braslet (occlusive cuffs wrapped around the calf) on hemodynamics were studied at rest and during the LBNP test during and on orthostatic stability post short (one-month) space flights. The ultrasonic procedure was applied to seven cosmonauts who had and six cosmonauts who had not worn the cuffs while in orbit. The device markedly alleviated the subjective feeling of discomfort caused by blood shift toward the cranial end at the beginning of adaptation to microgravity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF