Midodrine prevents orthostatic intolerance associated with simulated spaceflight

Author:

Ramsdell Craig D.12,Mullen Thomas J.32,Sundby Grete H.3,Rostoft Siri3,Sheynberg Natalie3,Aljuri Nikolai2,Maa Ming2,Mukkamala Ramakrishna2,Sherman Derin2,Toska Karin4,Yelle Janice5,Bloomfield Daniel6,Williams Gordon H.3,Cohen Richard J.32

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114;

2. NASA Center for Quantitative Cardiovascular Physiology, Modeling and Data Analysis, Harvard- MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139;

3. Brigham and Women's Hospital Endocrine-Hypertension Division, Boston 02115;

4. Royal Norwegian Air Force, Institute of Aviation Medicine, Oslo 0313; and Department of Physiology, University of Oslo, Oslo 0317, Norway;

5. NASA Johnson Space Center, Cardiovascular Laboratory, Houston, Texas 77058; and

6. Columbia University, New York, New York 10032

Abstract

Many astronauts after being weightless in space become hypotensive and presyncopal when they assume an upright position. This phenomenon, known as orthostatic intolerance, may interfere with astronaut function during reentry and after spaceflight and may limit the ability of an astronaut to exit a landed spacecraft unaided during an emergency. Orthostatic intolerance is more pronounced after long-term spaceflight and is a major concern with respect to the extended flights expected aboard the International Space Station and for interplanetary exploration class missions, such as a human mission to Mars. Fully effective countermeasures to this problem have not yet been developed. To test the hypothesis that α-adrenergic stimulation might provide an effective countermeasure, we conducted a 16-day head-down-tilt bed-rest study (an analog of weightlessness) using normal human volunteers and administered the α1-agonist drug midodrine at the end of the bed-rest period. Midodrine was found to significantly ameliorate excessive decreases in blood pressure and presyncope during a provocative tilt test. We conclude that midodrine may be an effective countermeasure for the prevention of orthostatic intolerance following spaceflight.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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3. Cardiovascular Aspects of Space Flight;Principles of Clinical Medicine for Space Flight;2019

4. Countermeasures;SpringerBriefs in Space Life Sciences;2016

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