Astronauts on long missions can experience the equivalent of 10 years of age-related bone density loss

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Image by WikiImages from Pixabay
Image by WikiImages from Pixabay

Astronauts on long missions experience the equivalent of 10 years of age-related bone density loss, even after 12 months of recovery, according to a small international study. The research investigated the shinbones of 17 astronauts after being in space, and found that people who went on space missions for longer than 6 months had substantially less bone recovery than people who were in space for less than 6 months. Altogether, nine of the astronauts did not fully recover their shinbone total bone mineral density after 12 months of recovery. Across all astronauts, those who completed greater amounts of in-flight deadlift training, relative to their individual training pre-flight, were identified as part of those who recovered tibia bone mineral density.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Space health: The path of most resistance could help limit bone loss during spaceflight *IMAGES* 

Astronauts that have returned after spaceflights over three months may show signs of incomplete bone recovery even after one year on Earth, but adding in more resistance-based exercises during spaceflight may help limit bone loss. The small study, published in Scientific Reports, on 17 international astronauts found that while the shinbone partially recovers, the sustained bone losses after one year are equivalent to ten years of normal age-related bone loss on Earth.

Steven Boyd and colleagues imaged 17 astronauts (14 male, three female) before spaceflight, at return to Earth, and after six and 12 months of recovery. They conducted bone scans on the tibia (shinbone) and radius (forearm) to calculate the resistance of the bone to fracture (failure load), bone mineral in the bone tissue, and tissue thickness. The authors also recorded exercises such as cycling, treadmill running and deadlifting completed by astronauts in-flight and post-flight.

One year after flight the median results for 16 of the astronauts showed incomplete recovery of the shinbone. Median shinbone failure load, measuring bone strength, was reduced by 152.0 newtons from 10,579 newtons at pre-flight to 10,427 newtons after one year. Total bone mineral density reduced by 4.5 milligrams per cubic centimeter compared to pre-flight levels of 326.8 mg/cm3. Measures of the forearm across all astronauts did not differ at 12 months’ recovery compared to pre-flight.

The authors observed that astronauts on missions longer than six months (a total of eight astronauts) had substantially less bone recovery. In astronauts on missions over six months the median shinbone failure load reduced by 333.9 newtons after one year compared to pre-flight, while in astronauts on missions shorter than six months (nine astronauts) the failure load reduced by 79.9 newtons. Similar differences were found for total bone mineral density in the shinbone. Altogether, nine of the astronauts (seven from long missions) did not fully recover shinbone total bone mineral density after 12 months.

Across all astronauts, those who completed greater amounts of in-flight deadlift training, relative to their individual training pre-flight, were identified as part of those who recovered tibia bone mineral density. The authors propose that as well as currently used exercise routines, a jumping resistance-based exercise that provides high-impact dynamic loads on the legs may help prevent bone loss and promote the formation of bone on spaceflight missions.

 

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Wrist bone
Wrist bone
Dr. Leigh Gabel, PhD
Dr. Leigh Gabel, PhD
Dr. Steven Boyd, PhD
Dr. Steven Boyd, PhD
Journal/
conference:
Scientific Reports
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Calgary, Canada
Funder: This study was supported by the Canadian Space Agency (Contract #9F053-120605—Concept Definition and #9F008-140715—Operational Support) and German Aerospace Centre (DLR, Contract #50WB1217, #50WB1520, #50WB1937, #50WB2021). LG was supported by an Alberta Innovates Health Solutions Postgraduate Fellowship. The biomarker data were shared from the Biochemistry Profile project, which was funded by the NASA Human Research Program’s Human Health Countermeasures Element. The funder of the study had no role in data collection, analysis, interpretation, or writing of the report. The corresponding author had full access to all the data in the study and accepts responsibility for the decision to submit for publication.
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