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November 2, 2001: "Use it or lose it."
The familiar mantra of fitness buffs applies as much in space
as it does on Earth -- perhaps more so. The bones and muscles
of astronauts, freed from the familiar strains of gravity,
can weaken alarmingly. Muscles atrophy relatively quickly,
while bones lose mass during prolonged exposures to weightlessness.
Reducing muscle atrophy requires exercise -- and lots of
it. Astronauts in space spend about two hours each day working
out with the aid of exotic devices that rely on springs, elastic,
and harnesses to provide resistance and mimic body weight.
Unfortunately, such "countermeasures" have not solved the
problem of muscle or bone loss. It's an ongoing problem for
astronauts -- and for researchers!
Above: The
proper type and amount of exercise is a key to maintaining
muscles and cardiovascular fitness in space. But the workouts
astronauts have tried so far haven't yet solved the problem
of bone or muscle loss. Image courtesy Johnson Space Center.
But now, perhaps, there could be a solution -- at least for
bones: NASA-funded scientists suggest that astronauts might
prevent bone loss by standing on a lightly vibrating plate for
10 to 20 minutes each day. Held down with the aid of elastic
straps, the astronauts could keep working on other tasks while
they vibrate.
The same therapy, they say, might eventually be used to treat
some of the millions of people who suffer from bone loss,
called osteoporosis, here on Earth.
"The vibrations are very slight," notes Stefan Judex, assistant
professor of biomedical engineering at the State University
of New York at Stony Brook, who worked on the research. The
plate vibrates at 90 Hz (1 Hz = 1 cycle per second), with
each brief oscillation imparting an acceleration equivalent
to one-third of Earth's gravity. "If you touch the plate with
your finger, you can feel a very slight vibration," he added.
"If you watch the plate, you cannot see any vibration at all."
Although the vibrations are subtle they have had a profound
effect on bone loss in laboratory animals such as turkeys,
sheep, and rats.
Left: Vibration plates such as this one were used for experiments on bone
loss involving turkeys, sheep, and rats. Pictured with the
turkey is researcher Dr. Clinton Rubin. Photo credit: Cary
Wolinsky. This image originally appeared in a National Geographic
feature article "Surviving in Space."
In one study (published in the October 2001 issue of The
FASEB Journal), only 10 minutes per day of vibration therapy
promoted near-normal rates of bone formation in rats that
were prevented from bearing weight on their hind limbs during
the rest of the day. Another group of rats that had their
hind legs suspended all day exhibited severely depressed bone
formation rates -- down by 92% -- while rats that spent 10
minutes per day bearing weight, but without the vibration
treatment, still had reduced bone formation -- 61% less.
These results show that the vibration treatment maintained
normal bone formation rates, while brief weight bearing did
not.
Clinton Rubin, a professor of biomedical engineering at SUNY
Stony Brook and principal investigator for the study, cautions
that more experiments are required before scientists can be
sure that vibration therapy is effective for people. "Animals
are different than humans," he notes. And even among humans
there are important variables, like nutrition and genetic
make-up. What works for post-menopausal women (who often suffer
from osteoporosis) might not work for astronauts in space.
In a recent "Phase I/II" clinical trial of vibration
therapy, researchers applied the treatment to 60 post-menopausal
women. Studies using adolescent girls with very low bone density
and children with cerebral palsy are also underway.
"The early results from the research with post-menopausal
women are very encouraging -- but they are preliminary. To
determine efficacy, we will need a larger scale clinical trial
that runs for a longer period of time," Rubin says.
A broader "Phase III" clinical trial is currently being organized,
which will provide a strong indication of the treatment's
effectiveness for the general population of osteoporosis sufferers.
Right: The primary weight-bearing bones
-- highlighted here in purple -- are also the ones most susceptible
to weakening in space. Picture from Human Physiology in
Space, a curriculum supplement for secondary schools.
(Lujan and White)
Whether astronauts would benefit from a vibration-plate regimen
is a question that can only be fully answered by conducting
experiments in space, Rubin says. Such tests have been proposed,
but none are scheduled yet.
Rubin hopes that future experiments will reveal not only
whether vibration therapy works, but also why.
It's a bit of a puzzle because the treatment doesn't comfortably
fit within the framework of conventional wisdom: Currently,
most bone researchers believe that the stresses placed on
bones by, e.g., bearing weight or strong physical exertion,
signal the bone-building cells through some unknown chemical
trigger to fortify bones. According to this thinking, the
remedy for bone loss in space should be exercises that duplicate
stresses on our muscles and skeletons experienced during a
daily and active life on Earth.
Unfortunately, without the pull of gravity it is very difficult,
if not impossible, to duplicate loads routinely experienced
by our muscles and bones on Earth. The regimen of exercise
that astronauts perform in space has shown some promise as
a countermeasure, but not enough to protect long-voyaging
astronauts from injury or bone fracture when they are re-exposed
to gravity -- either here on Earth or on some other planet.
Rubin suggests that perhaps it's not only a few, large
stresses placed on the skeleton that signal bone formation,
but also many smaller, high-frequency vibrations applied to
bones by flexing muscles during common activities such as
standing or walking.
Muscles may appear to pull steadily and constantly when flexing
-- like the pull of a stretched spring. But muscle contraction
is more complex than that. Individual muscle cells in most
skeletal muscles can't provide a sustained pull -- they can
only apply a quick "twitch." To create a constant pull, the
brain activates groups of muscle cells within a muscle (called
"motor units") in a rapid, repeating pattern.
Above: The
interior of bones isn't completely solid. Instead, it consists
of a web of mineral filaments -- called "trabeculae" -- and
cells (not shown in this micrograph). These trabeculae provide
structural rigidity while minimizing weight, like the steel
cross-members in a crane or a highway sign. Image courtesy
NASA Quest .
You can feel these subtle patterns by squatting and resting
your hands on your thighs -- the slight trembling of your
thigh muscles is the sequential contraction of the muscles'
motor units. The frequency of such contraction ranges between
10 and 100 Hz. In comparison, the experiment with rats used
a 90 Hz vibration, and the experiments with humans are using
30 Hz vibrations.
"Our hypothesis is that a key regulator of bone mass and morphology
are the mechanical stimuli that come out of muscle contractions,"
Rubin says. "So instead of these big, intensive deformations
of bone, it's basically lots and lots of little ones [that
provide a major stimulus for bone growth]."
"While exercise in space may generate some of these
signals, we believe that microgravity essentially extinguishes
these signals during the great majority of the day, as postural
activity is [markedly reduced compared to here on Earth],"
he says. "The vibration treatment generates a much larger
signal in this frequency range, and we believe that 10 minutes
per day of this higher frequency signal is sufficient to provide
a maintenance signal to bone."
Above:
When future astronauts return to Earth after a long voyage
to Mars and back -- all in reduced or zero gravity -- they
will need strong bones to once again stride across their home
planet. Vibration therapy might be the key. Painting by Pat
Rawlings.
"This is a real departure from the accepted theory of how
mechanical signals control bone, and it is certainly controversial,"
Rubin says.
Nevertheless, it might work. Good vibrations -- unexpected
and controversial -- could be the key to healthy bones on
Earth and beyond.
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