Author:
McGregor Heather R.,Hupfeld Kathleen E.,Pasternak Ofer,Beltran Nichole E.,De Dios Yiri E.,Bloomberg Jacob J.,Wood Scott J.,Mulavara Ajitkumar P.,Riascos Roy F.,Reuter-Lorenz Patricia A.,Seidler Rachael D.
Abstract
AbstractSpaceflight induces widespread changes in human brain morphology. It is unclear if these brain changes differ with varying mission duration or spaceflight experience history (i.e., novice or experienced, number of prior missions, time between missions). Here we addressed this issue by quantifying regional voxelwise changes in brain gray matter volume, white matter microstructure, extracellular free water (FW) distribution, and ventricular volume from pre- to post-flight in a sample of 30 astronauts. We found that longer missions were associated with greater expansion of the right lateral and third ventricles, with the majority of expansion occurring during the first 6 months in space then appearing to taper off for longer missions. Longer inter-mission intervals were associated with greater expansion of the ventricles following flight; crew with less than 3 years of time to recover between successive flights showed little to no enlargement of the lateral and third ventricles. These findings demonstrate that ventricle expansion continues with spaceflight with increasing mission duration, and inter-mission intervals less than 3 years may not allow sufficient time for the ventricles to fully recover their compensatory capacity. These findings illustrate some potential plateaus in and boundaries of human brain changes with spaceflight.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
National Institute on Aging
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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