Koutnik Andrew P, Favre Michelle E, Noboa Karina, Sanchez-Gonzalez Marcos A, Moss Sara E, Goubran Bishoy, Ari Csilla, Poff Angela M, Rogers Chris Q, DeBlasi Janine M, Samy Bishoy, Moussa Mark, Serrador Jorge M, D'Agostino Dominic P
Human Health, Resilience, & Performance, Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, Pensacola, FL, United States.
Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology, Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States.
Front Physiol. 2021 Jan 12;11:610000. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2020.610000. eCollection 2020.
Human adaptation to extreme environments has been explored for over a century to understand human psychology, integrated physiology, comparative pathologies, and exploratory potential. It has been demonstrated that these environments can provide multiple external stimuli and stressors, which are sufficient to disrupt internal homeostasis and induce adaptation processes. Multiday hyperbaric and/or saturated (HBS) environments represent the most understudied of environmental extremes due to inherent experimental, analytical, technical, temporal, and safety limitations. National Aeronautic Space Agency (NASA) Extreme Environment Mission Operation (NEEMO) is a space-flight analog mission conducted within Florida International University's Aquarius Undersea Research Laboratory (AURL), the only existing operational and habitable undersea saturated environment. To investigate human objective and subjective adaptations to multiday HBS, we evaluated aquanauts living at saturation for 9-10 days via NASA NEEMO 22 and 23, across psychologic, cardiac, respiratory, autonomic, thermic, hemodynamic, sleep, and body composition parameters. We found that aquanauts exposed to saturation over 9-10 days experienced intrapersonal physical and mental burden, sustained good mood and work satisfaction, decreased heart and respiratory rates, increased parasympathetic and reduced sympathetic modulation, lower cerebral blood flow velocity, intact cerebral autoregulation and maintenance of baroreflex functionality, as well as losses in systemic bodyweight and adipose tissue. Together, these findings illustrate novel insights into human adaptation across multiple body systems in response to multiday hyperbaric saturation.
一个多世纪以来,人们一直在探索人类对极端环境的适应情况,以了解人类心理学、综合生理学、比较病理学和探索潜力。已经证明,这些环境可以提供多种外部刺激和压力源,足以扰乱体内平衡并引发适应过程。由于固有的实验、分析、技术、时间和安全限制,多日高压和/或饱和(HBS)环境是研究最少的极端环境。美国国家航空航天局(NASA)的极端环境任务操作(NEEMO)是在佛罗里达国际大学的水瓶座海底研究实验室(AURL)进行的一项太空飞行模拟任务,该实验室是唯一现存的可运行且宜居的海底饱和环境。为了研究人类对多日HBS的客观和主观适应情况,我们通过NASA NEEMO 22和23任务,对在饱和环境中生活9至10天的潜水员的心理、心脏、呼吸、自主神经、体温、血流动力学、睡眠和身体成分参数进行了评估。我们发现,暴露于饱和环境9至10天的潜水员经历了身心负担,保持了良好的情绪和工作满意度,心率和呼吸频率降低,副交感神经调节增加,交感神经调节减少,脑血流速度降低,脑自动调节功能完好,压力反射功能得以维持,同时全身体重和脂肪组织减少。这些发现共同揭示了人类在多日高压饱和状态下多个身体系统适应的新见解。