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Vestibular plasticity following orbital spaceflight: recovery from postflight postural instabilityResults of previous studies suggested that the vestibular mediated postural instability observed in astronauts upon return to earth from orbital spaceflight may be exacerbated by an increased weighting of visual inputs for spatial orientation and control of movement. This study was performed to better understand the roles of visual and somatosensory contributions to recovery of normal sensori-motor postural control in returning astronauts. Preflight and postflight, 23 astronaut volunteers were presented randomly with three trials of six sensory organization test (SOT) conditions in the EquiTest system test battery. Sagittal plane center-of-gravity (COG) excursions computed from ground reaction forces were significantly higher on landing day than preflight for those test conditions presenting sway-referenced visual and/or somatosensory orientation cues. The ratio of summed peak-to-peak COG sway amplitudes on the two sway-referenced vision tests (SOTs 3 + 6) compared to the two eyes closed tests (SOTs 2 + 5) was increased on landing day, indicating an increased reliance on visual orientation cues for postural control. The ratio of peak-to-peak COG excursions on sway-referenced surfaces (SOTs 4, 5 & 6) to an earth fixed support surfaces (SOTs 1, 2 & 3) increased even more after landing suggesting primary reliance on somatosensory orientation cues for recovery of postflight postural stability. Readaptation to sway-referenced support surfaces took longer than readaptation to sway-referenced vision. The increased reliance on visual and somatosensory inputs disappeared in all astronauts 4-8 days following return to earth.
Document ID
20050000248
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Black, F. O.
(R S Dow Neurological Sciences Institute, Legacy Portland Hospitals OR 97210, United States)
Paloski, W. H.
Doxey-Gasway, D. D.
Reschke, M. F.
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: Acta oto-laryngologica. Supplementum
Volume: 520 Pt 2
ISSN: 0365-5237
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: DC-00205
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
NASA Program Space Physiology and Countermeasures
short duration
NASA Program Flight
NASA Center JSC
Non-NASA Center
NASA Discipline Number 16-10
manned
NASA Discipline Neuroscience
NASA Discipline Number 08-10
NASA Discipline Number 00-00
Flight Experiment
STS Shuttle Project

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