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Deformity in NASA astronauts 'could jeopardise long-term space missions'

London, Tue, 13 Mar 2012 ANI

London, Mar 13 (ANI): Brain scans of NASA astronauts, who have returned to Earth after more than a month in space, have revealed potentially serious abnormalities that could endanger long-term space missions.

 

Doctors examined 27 astronauts who had flown long-duration missions with the US space agency and found a pattern of deformities in their eyeballs, optic nerves and pituitary glands that remain unexplained.

 

The problems were similar to those caused by intracranial hypertension, which is a rare medical condition that occurs when pressure inside the skull rises and presses on the brain and the backs of the eyes.

 

Medical crews at NASA and space agencies in Europe, Russia, Japan and Canada are now screening astronauts before, during and after space missions.

 

Astronauts who had flown on the Space Shuttle and International Space Station reported changes to eyesight, with some seeing worse and others better.

 

Brain scans revealed that seven of the 27 astronauts had a flattening of the back of one or both eyes.

 

By making the eyeball shorter, this made the astronauts more long-sighted, which in some cases reduced or corrected their short-sightedness.

 

Larry Kramer, the study leader from the University of Texas Health Science Centre in Houston, said that the impact on astronauts' eyesight might become ''a new limiting factor'' to long excursions into space.

 

His results suggested that the abnormalities were worse and more frequent in astronauts who spent longer in weightless, or microgravity, conditions.

 

''Consider the possible impact on proposed manned missions to Mars or even the concept of space tourism. Can risks be eventually mitigated? Can abnormalities detected be completely reversed? The next step is confirming the findings, defining causation and working towards a solution based on solid evidence," the Guardian quoted Kramer as saying.

 

Four of the astronauts had swelling around the optic nerve, which could affect the transmission of signals from the eye to the brain and, in the longer term, cause nerve fibres to die off.

 

The worrying changes add to the effects of bone loss and muscle wastage that astronauts and their medical crews have known about for decades.

 

William Tarver, head of flight medicine at NASA's Johnson Space Centre in Houston, said no astronauts had been ruled out of flying after the findings, which he said were ''suspicious but not conclusive of intracranial hypertension''.

 

The study has been published in the journal Radiology. (ANI)

 


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