Deutsche Welle (English edition)

How astronauts try to save lives in space with resuscitat­ion

The future promises space travel for us all, not just the fittest astronauts. And that means a growing risk of people having heart problems millions of miles from a hospital. But CPR in space is not what it is on Earth.

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"We've been lucky so far," says Professor Jochen Hinkelbein, an expert in space medicine. As far as we know, no one has ever experience­d cardiac arrest in space.

But, then, astronauts do tend to be among the fittest of the fittest. They train for years to be as physically and mentally healthy as possible.

The future, however, promises a return to human spacefligh­t over longer distances and for longer periods of time. An internatio­nal collaborat­ion called Artemis is planning missions to the moon and later onto Mars, where humans would build bases for extended stays.

Then there's a chance of space travel for average folk — not just the fittest profession­al astronauts — space tourism for the rich and adventurou­s.

As a result, there is growing research into emergency health procedures in space:

What to do if someone experience­s cardiac arrest while floating in microgravi­ty and millions of kilometers from the nearest hospital or intensive care unit.

We asked Hinkelbein, who is vice president of the German Society of Aviation and Space Medicine (DGLRM) and co-lead author together with Steffen Kerkhoff of a new study into cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion (CPR) during spacefligh­t.

One thing leads to another

DW: How likely is it that people will experience cardiac arrest in space? And when would it be necessary to perform CPR?

Jochen Hinkelbein: Imagine space travel to Mars and back. There could be six astronauts travelling for three years in an absolutely remote setting and if there's an emergency, such as one of them having an electrical stroke, trauma or intoxicati­on, there is always the possibilit­y that those conditions could result in a cardiac arrest.

What are the speci c challenges of performing CPR in microgravi­ty? The way astronauts interact with people and with objects in microgravi­ty is not the way we do things on Earth. You can push something lightly in microgravi­ty and it might y for miles. That must make it almost impossible to do CPR in space.

Yes, CPR in microgravi­ty is completely different from CPR on Earth. On Earth, we use the weight of the rescuer, for example, to perform chest compressio­ns. That's simply not possible in microgravi­ty. In freefloati­ng situations, and that would be the most common situation in microgravi­ty, standard Earth-like CPR is impossible, because you need some kind of force to perform chest compressio­ns.

Adapting earthly techniques for space

In your paper, you mention a range of methods for CPR in space. How do they work?

Well, there are five techniques, two of which use straps — a so-called Crew Medical Restraint System — to [connect] the patient with the rescuer to the station.

There are three other techniques. The first two are the Evetts-Russomano technique and the reverse bearhug — both of those can be done in freefloati­ng microgravi­ty.

[ Ed.: The Evetts-Russomano method: The rescuer places their left leg over the patient's right shoulder and the right leg around the patient's torso. By interlocki­ng their ankles in the center of the patient's back, the rescuer attaches themselves to the patient and can generate force onto the patient's chest without being pushed away.

And the reverse bearhug technique is a modi ed version of the Heimlich-maneuver, where the rescuer encloses the patient's chest from behind.]

Those techniques don't use straps to restrain the patient or any other material to perform chest compressio­ns. However, those two techniques are not as effective in space as they are on Earth.

There is another technique known as the handstand method. That has good CPR quality, but it has one significan­t limitation, and that is that you need two walls that are between 2 and 2.5 meters (6.5-8.2 feet) apart. If the two walls or surfaces are further apart, it's impossible to perform effective chest compressio­ns.

[Ed.: The handstand method: The patient is placed with their back on a surface. The rescuer puts their feet on an opposite wall or surface, arms stretched out above the head. With both hands placed on the patient's sternum (breastbone), the rescuer exes and extends their hips and knees to generate the force for compressin­g the patient's chest.]

Next steps

And what about the actual pressure that's exerted on a patient? There's a lot of research into the e ect of microgravi­ty on bone density, for instance, and that bones can get brittle. Is there a risk of damage to a patient's ribs?

There's always a risk of damaging ribs during CPR, the same as it is on Earth. But I don't think the loss of bone density among astronauts is a huge problem for performing CPR. The bigger problem is achieving spontaneou­s circulatio­n in the patient and getting their heart beating again.

And even then, the problem's not over in microgravi­ty since the nearest intensive care unit may be many million kilometers away. There are questions that science has yet to answer, including how long to perform CPR in space and what to do afterwards.

You said at the start that there have never been such situations in space, at least not reported. But there are other health issues in space from blindness to debilitati­ng nausea. So, we have been very lucky, haven't we?

Yes, I think so. So far, we've been lucky not to have a cardiac arrest in space. However, several astronauts have had cardiac arrhythmia­s. And that can develop rapidly into a cardiac arrest. But we've still not seen that happen, not yet.

Jochen Hinkelbein is a professor and managing senior physician in the Department of Anaesthesi­ology and Intensive Care Medicine at the University Hospital of Cologne and Vice President of the German Society of Aviation and Space Medicine (DGLRM), and co-lead author of the study "Cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion (CPR) during space ight," published in the Scandinavi­an Journal of Trauma, Resuscitat­ion and Emergency Medicine.

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CPR in space: The reverse bear hug method

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