Friday, April 25, 2014
Bone Metabolism and the Effects of Spaceflight on the Skeleton
Bone metabolism is an ongoing mechanism that facilitates the
remodeling of bones by replacing older skeletal tissue with new skeletal tissue
(Clément, 2005, p. 180). This process
needs a variety of minerals such as calcium for example to generate healthy new
bones, and has three different steps in the following order: 1. Reabsorption of
the old tissue by the osteoclasts; 2. Reversal of the tissue when new bone
cells begin to form; 3. Formation of new bone tissue by osteoblasts to replace
the old tissue that has been reabsorbed (Hadjidakis and Androulakis, 2007, n.d.). The repair of fractures is when
bone metabolism is noticed in action. However, bone metabolism is also crucial
to continuously maintain a healthy bone architecture by repairing small damages
that occur during exercising or any sort of physical effort for example. Plasma
calcium homeostasis is also maintained during the process of bone metabolism
(Hadjidakis and Androulakis, 2007,
n.d.).
Space flight does have a strong effect on bone metabolism,
and the main reason behind it is that the process of bone remodeling in Earth
creatures has been going on for millions of years in the environment of the
planet’s gravity. Once in space, the skeletal system is exposed to
microgravity, and can be affected just like other systems in the human body.
Microgravity leads to a loss of almost two percent in bone minerals (Clément,
2005, p. 188). For example, calcium loss has been noticed in humans as well as
animals that spent any time between one week and one year in space, and the
loss progressed the longer the time spent in microgravity. A one year mission
led to a loss of about 25 percent of the total calcium in the body (“Bone
Metabolism,” n.d.). Bone loss has been noticed primarily in the lower body
skeletal tissue, and the bones that take most of the body’s weight, which
displayed a loss in collagenous matrix. Besides this it has been noticed that
both the number and size of bone cells decrease in microgravity (“Bone
Metabolism,” n.d.).
The current countermeasures available to the effects of
microgravity on bone metabolism include nutritional supplements and exercising.
Artificially created gravity could be a solution for future longer missions,
but so far this method was not found to be practical from an economic and
technical point of view for shorter trips (“Bone Metabolism,” n.d.).
References:
“Bone Metabolism”. ASCI513 Presentation 5 Part 2. Retrieved
from
https://erau.blackboard.com/bbcswebdav/pid-14006343-dt-content-rid-2666676_4/institution/Worldwide_Online/ASCI_513/PDFs/Module_5b.pdf
Clément, G. (2005). Fundamentals
of space medicine. Secaucus, NJ: Springer.
Hadjidakis D.J., Androulakis, I.I. (2007). Bone remodeling. Ann N. Y. Acad. Sci.
2006 Dec; DOI: 10.1196/annals.1365.035
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