Microgravity decreases heart rate and arterial pressure in humans

Adult Male 0301 basic medicine 0303 health sciences 03 medical and health sciences Time Factors Heart Rate Weightlessness Humans Blood Pressure Arteries Muscle Contraction
DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1996.80.3.910 Publication Date: 2017-12-22T06:31:16Z
ABSTRACT
Spaceflight causes adaptive changes in cardiovascular physiology, such as postflight orthostatic intolerance, that can have deleterious effects on astronauts. In-flight cardiovascular data are difficult to obtain, and results have been inconsistent. To determine normative in-flight changes in Shuttle astronauts, we measured heart rate, arterial pressure, and cardiac rhythm disturbances for 24-h periods before, during, and after spaceflight on Shuttle astronauts performing their normal routines. We found that heart rate, diastolic pressure, variability of heart rate and diastolic pressure, and premature ventricular contractions all were significantly reduced in flight. Systolic pressure and premature atrial contractions also tended to be reduced in flight. These data constitute the first systematic evaluation of in-flight changes in basic cardiovascular variables in Shuttle astronauts and suggest that a microgravity environment itself does not present a chronic stress to the cardiovascular system.
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