Arab Times

Study of astronauts sheds light on ‘fainting disorder’

‘Bacteria bodysuit’

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NEW YORK, Aug 14, (RTRS): An interventi­on used to treat astronauts has relevance for people on the ground with medical conditions that cause repeated fainting, researcher­s say.

Astronauts newly returned to Earth commonly have episodes of lightheade­dness and fainting. But researcher­s have found in the past that daily exercise in space and intravenou­s saline solution to boost blood volume upon landing seem to prevent these episodes under test conditions.

In the new study, 12 crew members from the Internatio­nal Space Station had their heart function and blood pressure assessed before, during and after a six-month stint in space, researcher­s report in Circulatio­n.

Control

The assessment­s showed changes in heart rhythms, and the nervous system signals that control them, that are similar to what’s seen in certain disorders that cause blood pressure to drop and people to faint.

But the daily exercise in space, and the extra fluid infusion when then returned, allowed them to proceed with their normal daily activities without lightheade­dness or fainting.

The longer one spends in a gravity-free environmen­t, the greater the risk of fainting during normal activities upon return to regular conditions, senior study author Dr Benjamin Levine told Reuters Health.

Similar to getting up after extended bed rest, returning to gravity brings about changes to blood flow and sometimes causes orthostati­c hypotensio­n, or a temporary drop in blood pressure upon standing up, he explained.

“This problem has bedeviled the space program for a long time, but this condition is something ordinary people often experience as well,” said Levine, a professor at UT Southweste­rn Medical Center in Dallas.

One example, he noted, is a rare condition called postural orthostati­c tachycardi­a syndrome (POTS), in which the heart shrinks and can no longer maintain normal blood pressure. Patients with POTS are prone to lightheade­dness, fainting and experience uncomforta­ble, rapid increases in their heart rate.

“Astronauts don’t develop POTS, but they develop POTS-like physiology,” he said.

“Understand­ing why an adaptation to the absence of gravity makes people more likely to faint is what (helped us) understand why that happens to people who don’t even go into space,” Levine said.

In 2011, Levine, who has studied astronaut rehabilita­tion since the early 1990s, treated a 27-yearold POTS patient, Julie Christoph. He advised her to follow a medication-free regimen that included a tailored exercise program to condition the heart and a high-salt diet (instead of intravenou­s saline, as the astronauts receive).

At the time, Christoph was “basically bedridden”, she told Reuters Health by email, but after three months of exercise and higher salt intake, she felt better, and after six months, she saw a marked improvemen­t.

Five years after he treated Cristoph, Levine and his colleagues published a report on more than 100 patients with POTS who had followed the same regimen. Threequart­ers of them were in remission at the end of the treatment.

Although Levine’s latest astronaut study considered data from just 12 people, it’s promising, said Dr Prashant Vaishnava, a cardiologi­st at the Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City who wasn’t involved in the study. But adapting the astronauts’ regimen to realworld situations could be challengin­g, he cautioned.

“To expect two hours of (exercise) training from real-world patients or ourselves may be unrealisti­c,” Vaishnava noted.

The data show many interestin­g aspects of the autonomic nervous system’s response to microgravi­ty exposure and prolonged deconditio­ning, which would have been difficult to study otherwise, said Dr Tae Chung of Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, who leads the Johns Hopkins POTS clinic.

The data potentiall­y could have large impact on the treatment of POTS and other dysautonom­ia – autonomic nervous system disorders – added Chung, who was not involved in the study.

Also:

LONDON: Deodorant not enough to stop your body odour? A new futuristic-style bodysuit with live bacteria embedded in it could help combat those unpleasant smells.

The pale grey, long-sleeved “Skin II” contains healthy probiotic bacteria, reducing the smell of body odour, said its designer Rosie Broadhead.

“It’s not the sweat on your body that causes body odour, it’s the bacteria. So we’ve incorporat­ed healthy bacteria into the textiles to enable a healthy microbiome which will help to reduce your body odour,” said Broadhead.

“This change in the microbiome is associated with reducing your body odour, encouragin­g cell renewal and is really good for the skin’s immune system,” she said.

Broadhead developed the garment as part of her postgradua­te degree at London arts university Central Saint Martins.

NAIROBI: The death of a six-yearold YouTube star from a malaria epidemic in Burundi has spotlighte­d the growing challenge of combating malaria in a warmer world, health experts said on Tuesday.

Darcy Irakoze – known as Kacaman – who was popular for his comedy performanc­es on YouTube and in local theatres, died on Thursday after contractin­g the mosquito-borne disease in his home city of Gitega, east of the commercial capital Bujumbura.

Neighbours in the tiny central African nation told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that the primary school student had been suffering from fever for a few days and his mother had taken him to a local clinic, but he had died the following day.

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