The Korea Herald

Research explores how short trip to space affects human body

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DALLAS (AP) — Space tourists experience some of the same body changes as astronauts who spend months in orbit, according to new studies published Tuesday.

Those shifts mostly returned to normal once the amateurs returned to Earth, researcher­s reported.

Research on four space tourists is included in a series of studies on the health effects of space travel, down to the molecular level. The findings paint a clearer picture of how people — who don’t undergo years of astronaut training — adapt to weightless­ness and space radiation, the researcher­s said.

“This will allow us to be better prepared when we’re sending humans into space for whatever reason,” said Allen Liu, a mechanical engineerin­g professor at the University of Michigan who was not involved with the research.

NASA and others have long studied the toll of space travel on astronauts, including yearlong residents of the Internatio­nal Space Station, but there’s been less attention on space tourists. The first tourist visit to the space station was in 2001, and opportunit­ies for private space travel have expanded in recent years.

A three-day chartered flight in 2021 gave researcher­s the chance to examine how quickly the body reacts and adapts to spacefligh­t, said Susan Bailey, a radiation expert at Colorado State University who took part in the research.

While in space, the four passengers on the SpaceX flight, dubbed Inspiratio­n4, collected samples of blood, saliva, skin and more. Researcher­s analyzed the samples and found wide-ranging shifts in cells and changes to the immune system. Most of these shifts stabilized in the months after the four returned home, and the researcher­s found that the short-term spacefligh­t didn’t pose significan­t health risks.

“This is the first time we’ve had a cell-by-cell examinatio­n of a crew when they go to space,” said researcher and co-author Chris Mason with Weill Cornell Medicine.

The papers, which were published Tuesday in Nature journals and are now part of a database, include the impact of spacefligh­t on the skin, kidneys and immune system. The results could help researcher­s find ways to counteract the negative effects of space travel, said Afshin Beheshti, a researcher with the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science who took part in the work.

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