ECG records of 25 cosmonauts--members of 30 long-term Mir and ISS missions (73- to 197-day long) in the period of 1995-2007 were analyzed. The ECG records were made during medical selection, clinical-physiological investigations (KFO) before launch, insertion and standard descent, and post-flight KFO. No negative trends were discovered in 70% (n=21) of ECG records during insertion and descent of cosmonauts who had not have significant ECG deviations before flight.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnalyzed were deviations in cardiac function in 29 cosmonauts with previous aviation and other occupations ranging of 29 to 61 y.o. who made 8- to 30-day space flights (totai number of flights = 34) between 1982 and 2006.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 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 PDFA group of 6 subjects (25-45 y.o.) participated in the studies of the tolerance of lateral (chest-back, +Gx) and longitudinal (head-pelvis, +Gz) loads before and after pharmacological hypohydration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvestigations into g-tolerance of female cosmonauts during descent in space flights of varying duration are topical for the present day, as there are little data on this issue. Tolerance of +Gz-loads during descent was analyzed based on the data about 4 female cosmonauts in 5 space flights. The space flights were conventionally divided into short- (8-16 days) and long-term (169 days).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReported are results of the study of tolerance of the "thorax-back" g-loads (+Gx) during deorbiting of 83 total suited and unsuited cosmonauts in the period of 1997-1997. G-loads averaged 3.7 +/- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAviakosm Ekolog Med
August 1998
Analyzed was the role of age in the tolerance of +Gz (up to 5 units) and +Gx (up to 8 units) by female candidates to cosmonauts on the stage of initial centrifuge selection in the years of 1979 through to 1993. Selection was made of 26 healthy non-flying women aged 23 to 39 who were divided into 4 groups with 5-year intervals. Female tolerance of g-loads and shifts in a number of physiological parameters during centrifugation were discovered to be age-dependent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe goal of the work was to study female tolerance of g-loads before and after simulated weightlessness, and evaluate the effectiveness of countermeasures and anti-g means proposed for space flight. Centrifuge with a 7.25 m arm was used for 29 runs of 8 female subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelected cosmonauts-investigators may be held on wait for many years. The longitudinal health study is of great significance in the context of prediction of tolerance to various flight stresses. The purpose of this work was to investigate the tolerance to +Gz-loads during extended (up to 18 years) dynamic longitudinal study of 50 male cosmonauts and candidates of non-flying occupations by the data of 363 medical observation runs on a centrifuge with the radius of 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExposure to +Gz acceleration, orthostatic tilt tests and LBNP tests causes distinct blood shifts and deterioration of cerebral circulation. In this case syncope episodes may be prevented by continuous monitoring of circulation parameters, specifically arterial pressure (AP). Our investigations have shown that continuous AP measurement by the Penjaz noninvasive technique may help earlier prediction of the health status in response to gravity-induced blood shifts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNinety-six healthy nonpilots, aged 21 to 50 years, were exposed to 228 rotations on a 7.25 m arm human centrifuge. The study demonstrated age-related changes in +Gz tolerance of 3 to 5 G (for 30 sec).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTolerance to +Gz and +Gx acceleration of healthy and atherosclerotic subjects, aged 40-49, was investigated during 256 centrifugation tests in Bulgaria and the USSR. As compared to the healthy people, the atherosclerotic subjects showed a lower tolerance: when exposed to 7 +Gz the tolerance threshold decreased from 5.93 +/- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKosm Biol Aviakosm Med
January 1985
Forty-five men (non-pilots) aged 41-58 were used in 186 experimental runs to study their tolerance to +GZ acceleration. The test subjects were either healthy people or showed atherosclerotic symptoms (the number of which varied from 1-2 to 5 and more). During centrifugation the test subjects had no anti-G suits on.
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