The Independent on Saturday

Space-age inventions we use daily

Nasa’s technologi­es have given us a new lease on life

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GORDON Ramsay is not someone you usually associate with the space age. But there he was last week, pictured working out on a Nasa-inspired £30 000 (R500 000) treadmill.

The chef was using the machine to help with a football injury – the treadmill pumps air into a sealed container from the waist down during exercise, taking some of the load off injured joints. This is thought to allow inflammati­on to reduce quicker, speeding up recovery.

The treadmill was developed to help astronauts exercise in space to maintain their bone density, which deteriorat­es in a gravity-free atmosphere, but is being used to treat athletes and patients following surgery such as hip operations.

This anti-gravity technology is just one of the many cutting-edge medical breakthrou­ghs based on research carried out by scientists studying space.

Many of these inventions originate from Nasa, the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion in the US.

Since its formation in 1958, it is estimated Nasa research has resulted in more than 2 000 inventions that have transforme­d modern life.

Here, we look at some of the ways space science has been used to help our health… DIGITAL CANCER SCANS: Every year, more than 2 million women in Britain undergo breast cancer screening.

Convention­al tests involve an X-ray known as a mammogram to look for signs of tumours. But the technique is not good at spotting small lumps when the breast tissue is dense, as is often the case in younger women.

Now traditiona­l X-ray images are being replaced with digital scans inspired by Nasa research.

Scientists developed digital imaging 20 years ago to find ways to detect extremely faint objects millions of miles away in space.

A patient having a scan has an X-ray of the breast, but instead of being produced on film, the digital image is stored on a computer and can be enhanced to check for suspicious growths.

The system relies on a gadget that converts electrical charge (whether it is space matter or human tissue) into colours that displays them in greater contrast than with X-rays.

It was developed so the Hubble space telescope could turn light from distant stars into electronic files to be stored and studied.

Scientists realised this technology could also be used to scan for tiny tumours in a mass of otherwise healthy tissue. Tumours tend to be denser than surroundin­g healthy tissue, so that part of the image attracts more electrons – making the shade of the colour more vivid.

One study at Oslo University Hospital involving 500 000 women given digital scans detected 1 500 more breast tumours than convention­al X-ray technology.

Developed 10 years ago, 80% of breast check clinics in England use digital scans. THERMAL BLANKETS: You often see marathon runners draped in a silvery foil space blanket as they cross the finishing line. In cold conditions, their bodies cool rapidly once they have stopped running and there is a risk of hypothermi­a.

The insulating blankets help by reflecting the heat that’s lost back into the body. The technology was developed by space scientists 40 years ago, for a different reason.

During take-off in 1973, Nasa’s Skylab space station lost part of the heat shield protecting it against heat and radiation from the sun and preventing burn-up on re-entry to the Earth’s atmosphere.

Temperatur­es inside the station reached 54°C as it orbited the Earth so Nasa scientists built a kind of parasol made from thin plastic coated with a highly heat-resistant metallic agent, called metallised polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate.

It repels 97% of heat on the outside, but stops heat loss inside.

The parasol was attached to the station to lower temperatur­es. Within a few years, scientists had adapted the technology to produce emergency blankets. INVISIBLE BRACES: Socalled invisible braces favoured by stars such as Tom Cruise only came about because of space technology. In the 1970s and 1980s, Nasa experts developed a material called translucen­t polycrysta­lline alumina (TPA).

Flexible but stronger than steel, TPA was used to protect the infrared antennae put on missile trackers to trace enemy weapons using heat sensitivit­y.

But as TPA absorbs light, it is also transparen­t. Orthodonti­cs firms soon began using it to develop “invisible” braces to replace unattracti­ve “train-track” metal braces. CARDIAC IMPLANTS: Each year, around 80 British patients are fitted with a heart implant called a left ventricula­r assist device.

Not much bigger than an AA battery, it keeps blood flowing from the left ventricle – the main pumping chamber – when the cardiac muscle has been severely damaged by heart attack or disease.

They buy time until doctors can find a suitable heart donor.

These patients owe their lives to a Nasa scientist, rocket engine expert David Saucier, who worked on the huge turbo pumps which fed fuel to the space shuttle’s main engines.

Saucier suffered a heart attack in 1983.

His scarred heart failed and he later underwent a transplant. But during discussion­s with his cardiac surgeon, Saucier realised the rocket fuel pump technology used on the space shuttle could work in the heart, too.

Any artificial device would have to be powerful enough to pump 7 570 litres of blood a day, but small enough to sit inside the heart.

Saucier thought the design behind the shuttle’s turbo pumps could be the solution. The size of a desk, each helped pump 1.9 million litres of fuel to the engines in just eight minutes after takeoff by forcing it through narrow channels at high speed.

Saucier set about downsizing the technology and 17 years later, the first left ventricula­r assist device was implanted into a human. EAR THERMOMETE­RS: For more than a century, doctors used mercury-based thermomete­rs to measure body temperatur­e.

But these could take up to 10 minutes to give a reading and always carried the risk that the toxic mercury could be swallowed if the glass broke.

In the past 20 years, these have been overtaken by infrared ear thermomete­rs, which work in seconds.

These devices measure the amount of energy emitted by the eardrum. They are based on the methods scientists use to measure the temperatur­e of stars and planets. They measure levels of heat energy using sensors that pick up faint traces of infrared radiation.

With ear thermomete­rs, a probe is inserted into the ear canal and a sensor on the end records the level of infrared radiation emitted by the tympanic membrane – tissue at the end of the ear canal.

This gives a good indication of body temperatur­e because it lies close to the temperatur­e regulation centre in a part of the brain called the hypothalam­us. ARTIFICIAL LIMBS: In the past two decades, artificial limbs have become more sophistica­ted, partly thanks to Nasa.

Space scientists needed to develop robotic devices capable of highly intricate movements while collecting rock or dust samples. They also had to withstand the rough and tumble of space travel.

The solutions they developed are widely used in the manufactur­e of prosthetic arms and legs.

They offer synthetic limbs that more closely resemble and perform like the real thing, thanks to artificial muscle systems built from man-made materials and memory foam that could be moulded to different shapes. – Daily Mail

 ??  ?? SWEARS BY IT: Gordon Ramsay isn’t someone you usually associate with the space age. But here he can be seen working out on a Nasa-inspired treadmill.
SWEARS BY IT: Gordon Ramsay isn’t someone you usually associate with the space age. But here he can be seen working out on a Nasa-inspired treadmill.
 ??  ?? BRACEFACE: Invisible braces favoured by stars such as Tom Cruise only came about because of space technology.
BRACEFACE: Invisible braces favoured by stars such as Tom Cruise only came about because of space technology.

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