Saturday 10 April 2021

Exercise did not prevent an astronaut’s heart from shrinking

 

  • American astronaut Mark Kelly spent 340 days in space, and changes to his body help researchers understand the effects of living in low gravity.
  • Over the course of his mission, Kelly lost heart mass despite a rigorous exercise regimen.
  • A new research paper says studying extreme swimmers can help understand the impact low gravity has on human bodies.
  • The study reports on a similar loss in heart size in a man who attempted to swim across the Pacific Ocean in 2018.

Earth’s gravity was undoubtedly a factor in the way human muscles evolved. The heart, for example, has to be strong enough to pump blood upward from the feet, where it would otherwise collect.

In low gravity, however, such muscles do not have to work so hard.

Since muscles must be exercised to remain healthy, and as preparations for extended missions are underway, scientists are concerned about the effect living in space can have on the human body.

A research letter from cardiovascular experts at the University of Texas Southwestern (UT Southwestern) examines the physiological effects spending 340 days in space had on Kelly.

Kelly’s heart shrank by an average of 0.74 grams per week during the year he spent in space, although the muscle continued to perform well.

The research, published in the journal Circulation, compares the changes to Kelly’s heart size with an unexpected yet similar change in the heart size of an athlete who attempted to swim across the Pacific Ocean.

Dr. Levine’s experience with space and cardiological health extends back to the 1980s, when he implanted the first catheter in an astronaut, which allowed NASA to monitor heart pressure while in space.

Kelly was in space between March 27, 2015, and March 1, 2016. The loss in left-ventricle mass he experienced was the equivalent of three-tenths of an ounce per week.

Kelly’s heart mass decreased in spite of a rigorous regimen of cycling, treadmill, or resistance work 6 days per week.

Dr. Levine recently completed a study of 13 astronauts who had been aboard the International Space Station for 6 months. The effects of the time spent in space varied from person to person.

Dr. Levine found that the astronauts who were the fittest at launch lost heart muscle during their missions, whereas the less fit flyers gained heart mass while in space.

“It all depended on how much work the astronaut’s heart did in space relative to how much it regularly did on the ground,” he says.

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