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Astronauts
face bone danger
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| Cosmonauts from Mir were tested Astronauts returning from missions in space may take months to start recovering from dangerous bone-thinning. |
| Living in conditions of near zero-gravity places less stress on bones, and in response, they weaken. |
| This thinning could mean that astronauts are vulnerable to bone fractures. |
| Researchers have discovered that the bone-loss, far from stopping when they come back to Earth, can continue for months. |
| The study, presented in this week's Lancet medical journal, could have serious implications for any future attempts to travel longer distances in space. |
| Researchers from St Etienne in France closely examined 15 cosmonauts who had spent between one month and six on board the Mir space station. |
| The cosmonauts started losing bone density in the tibia - a weight-bearing leg bone - as soon as they reached Mir. |
| After a month at near-weightlessness in space, an average of 1.7% of bone density was lost. |
| This continued as the space missions lengthened. |
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Bone
thinning continues
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| However, bone thinning even continued when they came back to Earth, suggesting that once the process had been set in motion, it is hard to stop it happening. |
| Dr Michael Holick, an expert on weightlessness and bone density, said: "Before the space programme can send astronauts for long-duration space flights, such as a mission to Mars or colonisation of the Moon, there needs to be a resolution to the difficulty of microgravity-induced bone loss." |
| The closest UK osteoporosis specialists come to this phenomenon is the treatment of patients who are on long-term bed rest. |
| Dr Brian Kaufman, based at the Central Middlesex Hospital in London, said: "One treatment that may be used is biphosphanates, which coat the bone and stop it being broken down." |
| Astronauts carry out rigorous physical training while in space to try to minimise the bone loss suffered. |
| from: BBC Online Posted on May 4, 2000 |
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