Dry immersion (DI) is a ground-based model of prolonged conditions of simulated microgravity. Dry immersion involves immersing the subject in water covered with an elastic waterproof fabric. As a result, the immersed subject, who is freely suspended in the water mass, remains dry. Within a relatively short duration, the model can faithfully reproduce most physiological effects of actual microgravity, including centralization of body fluids, support unloading, and hypokinesia. The objective of the study is to evaluate the physiological changes induced by 5 days of dry immersion in the female organism. The main physiological systems will be explored before, during and after the 5 days of immersion through a battery of specific tests and measurements. The results will be analyzed by scientists specializing in each field in order to better understand the dry immersion model, to compare its effects with those of the bedrest model and those of spaceflight. The clinical (adverse effects, comfort of subjects) and operational aspects are also part of the secondary objectives of the study.
The space agencies are actively engaged in studying the physiological adaptation to space environment through studies on board the International Space Station (ISS) but also on the ground. Ground-based experiments simulating the effects of weightlessness are used to better understand the mechanisms of physiological adaptation, design and validate the countermeasures. Dry immersion (DI) is a ground-based model of prolonged conditions of simulated microgravity, which has been mainly used in Russia. The past years however, the model has been implemented as well in Europe and expertise in conducting DI studies has been gained in particular in France where a few DI studies have been conducted in the MEDES Space Clinic in Toulouse for CNES (French Space Agency). Dry immersion involves immersing the subject in water covered with an elastic waterproof fabric. As a result, the immersed subject, who is freely suspended in the water mass, remains dry. Within a relatively short duration, the model can faithfully reproduce most physiological effects of actual microgravity, including centralization of body fluids, support unloading, and hypokinesia. Furthermore, physiological changes have been reported in the neuromuscular, skeletal and sensorimotor systems, in fluid electrolyte regulation, in the cardiovascular system, metabolism, blood and immunity, respiration, and thermoregulation. Dry immersion provides a unique opportunity to study the physiological effects of the lack of a supporting structure for the body (a phenomenon called 'supportlessness'). As such, dry immersion is proposed to mimic actual spaceflight in terms of the monotonous environment, posture-motion limitations, hemodynamic changes and hypokinetic effects, support unloading, and decreased proprioceptive input. Immersion studies have so far only been conducted in men and a minority of studies using the bedrest model have included women. Likewise, few studies conducted to date have investigated gender differences in the astronaut population. The small number of female astronauts may be part of the reason why scientific data are lacking to draw valid conclusions about possible gender differences. However, if women currently constitute only about 10% of astronauts, women are and will be more and more represented in crews. Women now constitute 30% of American crews and NASA (US space agency) has announced gender parity for crews on future lunar missions. It is therefore essential to study the physiological changes induced by weightlessness in women, to compare them with those observed in men and to develop efficient countermeasures for preventing them. The main physiological systems will be explored before, during and after the 5 days of immersion through a battery of specific standardized tests and measurements. The objective of the study is to evaluate the physiological changes induced by 5 days of dry immersion in the female organism. The study conditions such as patient recruitment, nutrition, data collection, data management, reporting for adverse events are standardized. The results will be analyzed by scientists specializing in each field in order to better understand the dry immersion model, to compare its effects with those of the bedrest model and those of spaceflight. The clinical (adverse effects, comfort of subjects) and operational aspects are also part of the secondary objectives of the study. Twenty healthy female subjects will participate in the study. There is no published data on dry immersion with female participation to help calculation the sample size. Moreover, female spaceflight and bedrest data are scarce, and do not provide any insight into inter-individual variability. This prolonged DI protocol in women is conceived as a pilot, descriptive, explorative study, as well as an operational and methodological study. Power-based calculation of the number of subjects is not directly applicable for such explorative studies. However, based on effect sizes obtained with previous DI studies in men, a total of 20 subjects was deemed necessary for this study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
Subjects are immersed up to the neck for 5 days in a specially designed bath filled with tap water.
Medes-Imps
Toulouse, France
Change in orthostatic tolerance
Orthostatic tolerance will be assessed during a Lower Body Negative Pressure test (LBNP test)
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry immersion
Change in peak aerobic power (VO2max test)
Exercise capacity wil be assessed by graded cycling on sitting ergometer until exhaustion
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry immersion
Change in plasma volume
Plasma volume (L) will be assessed by the CO-rebreathing method.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry immersion
Change in fluid shift distribution towards the cephalic region
The hemodynamic and morphologic consequences of the fluid shift on the cephalic blood vessels (jugular vein, carotid, femoral, intracranial veins) and on the left ventricle will be investigated by ultrasound. The hormones involved in fluid distribution will be assessed in blood and urine samples
Time frame: At baseline, the first day to quantify the short term effect and the fifth day of dry-immersion to quantify the long term effect of fluid shift
Change in vascular endothelium integrity
Vascular endothelium integrity will be assessed by blood parameters of vascular and endothelial integrity. Global score of endothelial state will be calculated.
Time frame: At baseline and during the five days of the dry-immersion period
Change in circadian rhythms of blood pressure
Continuous 24-h recording of blood pressure will be performed by SOMNOtouch™ NIBP system designed for ambulatory continuous measurements
Time frame: At baseline and during the five days of the dry-immersion period
Change in lower limb veins functions
Venous compliance of lower limbs will be assessed by plethysmography.
Time frame: At baseline, after four days of dry-immersion and after one day of recovery
Change in body fluid compartments by bioelectrical impedance analysis
Extracellular, intracellular and total body water will be estimated by bioimpedance
Time frame: Baseline and during five days of dry-immersion
Change in muscle strength
Muscle strength will be assessed from single leg isometric maximal voluntary contraction on the knee extensors \& flexors, the plantarflexors and dorsiflexors. The Isometric Torque will be measured in Nm. The peak of the three maximal attempts will be recorded for strength measures.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in muscle fatigue
Muscle fatigability will be assessed during a submaximal isometric knee extension contraction held for 30 seconds at 50% of the baseline MVC value.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in muscle volume at calf level
Muscle dehydration, eventual atrophy and fatty degeneration will be measured by quantitative Dixon MRI sequences at calf level
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in contraction time
Contraction time will be assessed during a tensiomyographic test in vastus lateralis, Gastrocnemius medialis and Biceps femoris of dominant leg / arm
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in bone metabolism
Bone metabolism in response to immobilization by dry immersion will be assessed by measuring bone biomarkers in blood samples.
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Changes in cartilage metabolism
Cartilage metabolism in response to immobilization by dry immersion will be assessed by measuring cartilage biomarkers in blood and urine samples.
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR)
RMR will be measured by indirect calorimetry technique
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in nitrogen balance
Nitrogen balance is a measure of nitrogen input minus nitrogen output. Nitrogen intake is calculated with a nutrition software. Protein oxidation measured in the 24-Hour urine collection estimates nitrogen output.
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in Body Composition measured by DEXA
DEXA is a standard clinical technique to assess body composition
Time frame: At baseline and at the end of the 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in glucose tolerance (Oral Glucose Tolerance Test)
Glucose and insulin levels will be measured at baseline (fasting) and 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes after drinking within 5 min a water solution containing 75 g of glucose.
Time frame: At baseline and after 3 days of dry-immersion (to be comparable to a previous study on men)
Change in Core temperature
Measured by electronic ingestible temperature capsules (e-Celsius Performance)
Time frame: At baseline and during the 5 days of dry immersion
Change in height
Measured in supine and standing position
Time frame: At baseline, during and after the 5 days of dry immersion
Change in mid cerebral artery (MCA) blood flow velocity
Transcranial Doppler measurements
Time frame: Before and after the 5 days of dry immersion
Change in mood
Change in mood is assessed using the Profile of Mood States (POMS) questionnaire. (POMS).
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in psychological affects
PANAS Questionnaire will be used to assess the intensity of positive and negative affective states
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in psychological state: sleep quality
Pittsburgh Sleep Dairy will be used to assess sleep perceived quality
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in psychological state: mental health
GHQ-28 Questionnaire will be used to assess psychological well-being and capture distress
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in psychological state: coping strategies
Brief Cope Questionnaire, designed to measure effective and ineffective ways to cope with a stressful life event, will be used to assess coping strategies
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in cerebral autoregulation
Transcranial Doppler measurements of mid cerebral artery blood flow velocity will allow to determine cerebral autoregulation
Time frame: At baseline and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in Intra Cranial Pressure (ICP)
ICP changes will be monitored through OtoAcoustic Emissions (OAE).
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) considered as an indirect marker for intracranial pressure (ICP) estimation.
The optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) variations will be measured by echography.
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry-immersion
Change in the optic nerve fibers thickness.
Thickness of the optic nerve fibers will be measured by Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT)
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in intraocular pressure (IOP)
IOP measured by applanation
Time frame: At baseline, during and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in visual acuity
Far and near visual acuity are tested uncorrected, or if applicable with own correction with digital acuity system.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in visual field
Visual field measured by standard automated perimetry
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in the anatomical characteristics of the eye (optical biometry)
Optical biometry measured by partial coherence interferometry
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in the central corneal thickness
Central corneal thickness on a single point on the cornea measured by Ultrasonic pachymetry
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in the retina by non-mydriatic fundus retinography
Non-mydriatic fundus retinography allows a fundus photography to be taken and thus a color image of the papilla, retinal vessels and macula.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in the cornea topography
Cornea topography measured by corneal topography equipment (like Pentacam). The elevation topography according to Scheimpflug principle allows the mapping of the anterior and posterior surface of the cornea.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in cerebral structures and in venous circulation of the brain by MRI
Visualization of cerebral structures and intracranial venous system will be performed by MRI coupled with injection of gadolinium.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in walking balance
Walking balance will be assessed by Dynamic Gait Index, specific parameter is: total Score (range 0-24). Higher scores mean a better outcome.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in standing balance
Standing balance will be assessed by posturography eyes open and eyes closed on a platform covered with 12-cm thick medium density foam.
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in motion sickness susceptibility
Motion Sickness Questionnaire
Time frame: At baseline and after five days of dry-immersion
Change in coagulation cascade
Coagulation cascade in response to immobilization by dry immersion will be assessed by measuring coagulation parameters in blood.
Time frame: At baseline, during and after 5 days of dry immersion
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