Effects of five days of bed rest with intermittent centrifugation on neurovestibular function

J Musculoskelet Neuronal Interact. 2015 Mar;15(1):60-8.

Abstract

Objectives: We tested whether intermittent short-radius centrifugation was effective for mitigating alteration in balance and gait following bed rest.

Methods: Ten male subjects were exposed to 5 days of 6° head-down tilt bed rest with: (a) no countermeasure; (b) daily 1-g centrifugation for a continuous 30-min period; and (c) daily 1-g centrifugation for six periods of 5 min. During and after the bed rest, subjects were asked to scale the severity of neurovestibular symptoms that followed centrifugation or 80° head-up tilt. Following the bed rest, equilibrium scores were derived from anterior-posterior sway while standing on a foam pad with the eyes open or closed while making pitch head movements, and gait was evaluated by grading subjects' performance during various locomotion tasks.

Results: At the beginning of bed rest, one single 30-min period of centrifugation induced more severe neurovestibular symptoms than six periods of 5-min centrifugation. After bed rest, although equilibrium scores and gait performance were not significantly altered, subjects felt less neurovestibular dysfunction with orthostatic stress when centrifugation was used.

Conclusion: Centrifugation was effective at reducing the severity of neurovestibular symptoms after bed rest, but this decrease was not different between one or multiple daily sessions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Bed Rest
  • Centrifugation*
  • Gravity, Altered*
  • Head-Down Tilt
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Space Motion Sickness / prevention & control*
  • Vestibular Function Tests