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Estimating the Rate of Occurrence of Renal Stones in AstronautsChanges in urine chemistry, during and post flight, potentially increases the risk of renal stones in astronauts. Although much is known about the effects of space flight on urine chemistry, no inflight incidence of renal stones in US astronauts exists and the question "How much does this risk change with space flight?" remains difficult to accurately quantify. In this discussion, we tackle this question utilizing a combination of deterministic and probabilistic modeling that implements the physics behind free stone growth and agglomeration, speciation of urine chemistry and published observations of population renal stone incidences to estimate changes in the rate of renal stone presentation. The modeling process utilizes a Population Balance Equation based model developed in the companion IWS abstract by Kassemi et al. (2016) to evaluate the maximum growth and agglomeration potential from a specified set of urine chemistry values. Changes in renal stone occurrence rates are obtained from this model in a probabilistic simulation that interrogates the range of possible urine chemistries using Monte Carlo techniques. Subsequently, each randomly sampled urine chemistry undergoes speciation analysis using the well-established Joint Expert Speciation System (JESS) code to calculate critical values, such as ionic strength and relative supersaturation. The Kassemi model utilizes this information to predict the mean and maximum stone size. We close the assessment loop by using a transfer function that estimates the rate of stone formation from combining the relative supersaturation and both the mean and maximum free stone growth sizes. The transfer function is established by a simulation analysis which combines population stone formation rates and Poisson regression. Training this transfer function requires using the output of the aforementioned assessment steps with inputs from known non-stone-former and known stone-former urine chemistries. Established in a Monte Carlo system, the entire renal stone analysis model produces a probability distribution of the stone formation rate and an expected uncertainty in the estimate. The utility of this analysis will be demonstrated by showing the change in renal stone occurrence predicted by this method using urine chemistry distributions published in Whitson et al. 2009. A comparison to the model predictions to previous assessments of renal stone risk will be used to illustrate initial validation of the model.
Document ID
20160012340
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Myers, J.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Goodenow, D.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Gokoglu, S.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Kassemi, M.
(Case Western Reserve Univ. Cleveland, OH, United States)
Date Acquired
October 14, 2016
Publication Date
February 8, 2016
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Statistics And Probability
Report/Patent Number
GRC-E-DAA-TN29813
Report Number: GRC-E-DAA-TN29813
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2016 NASA Human Research Program Investigators Workshop (HRP IWS 2016)
Location: Galveston, Tx
Country: United States
Start Date: February 8, 2016
End Date: February 11, 2016
Sponsors: NASA Johnson Space Center
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNC13BA10B
WBS: WBS 444543.01.02.10
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
gravitational physiology
physiological response
renal stone
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