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Recovery of Spaceflight-induced Bone Loss: Bone Mineral Density after Long-Duration Missions as Fitted with an Exponential FunctionThe loss of bone mineral in NASA astronauts during spaceflight has been investigated throughout the more than 40 years of space travel. Consequently, it is a medical requirement at NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC) that changes in bone mass be monitored in crew members by measuring bone mineral density (BMD) with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) before and after flight on astronauts who serve on long-duration missions (4-6 months). We evaluated this repository of medical data to track whether there is recovery of bone mineral that was lost during spaceflight. Our analysis was supplemented by BMD data from cosmonauts ( by convention, a space traveler formally employed by the Russia Aviation and Space Agency or by the previous Soviet Union) who had also flown on long-duration missions. Data from a total of 45 individual crew members -- a small number of whom flew on more than one mission -- were used in this analysis. Changes in BMD (between 56 different sets of pre- and postflight measurements) were plotted as a function of time (days after landing). Plotted BMD changes were fitted to an exponential mathematical function that estimated: i) BMD change on landing day (day 0) and ii) the number of days after landing when 50% of the lost bone would be recovered ("50% recovery time") in the lumbar spine, trochanter, pelvis, femoral neck and calcaneus. In sum, averaged losses of bone mineral after long-duration spaceflight ranged between 2-9% across all sites with our recovery model predicting a 50% restoration of bone loss for all sites to be within 9 months.
Document ID
20070032016
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Sibonga, J. D.
(Universities Space Research Association Houston, TX, United States)
Evans, H. J.
(Wyle Labs., Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Sung, H. G.
(Universities Space Research Association Houston, TX, United States)
Spector, E. R.
(Wyle Labs., Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Lang, T. F.
(California Univ. San Francisco, CA, United States)
Oganov, V. S.
(Academy of Sciences (Russia) Moscow, Russian Federation)
Bakulin, A. V.
(Academy of Sciences (Russia) Moscow, Russian Federation)
Shackelford, L. C.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
LeBlanc, A. D.
(Universities Space Research Association Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
August 23, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2007
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNJ04HC7SA
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS-9-99055
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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