Heart Rate Monitoring and Control in Altered Gravity Conditions

On the basis of indirect evidences it has been hypothesized that during space missions the almost complete absence of gravity might impair the baroreflex control of circulation. In the first part of this paper we report results obtained from a series of experiments carried out to directly verify this hypothesis during the 16-day STS 107 Shuttle flight. Spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity was assessed in four astronauts before flight (baseline) and at days 0-1, 6-7 and 12- 13 during flight, both at rest and while performing moderate exercise. Our results indicate that at rest the baroreflex sensitivity significantly increased in the early flight phase, as compared to pre-flight values and tended to return to baseline in the mid-late phase of flight. During exercise, baroreflex sensitivity was lower than at rest, without any difference among pre-flight and in-flight values. These findings seem to exclude the hypothesis of an impairment of the baroreflex control of heart rate during exposure to microgravity, at least over a time window of 16 days. In the second part of the paper we propose a novel textile- based methodology for heart rate and other vital signs monitoring during gravity stress. The positive results obtained from its use during parachute jumps support the use of smart garments for the unobtrusive assessment of physiological parameters in extreme environments.

[1]  P. Castiglioni,et al.  Applications of a Textile-Based Wearable System for Vital Signs Monitoring , 2006, 2006 International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.

[2]  G. Breithardt,et al.  Heart rate variability: standards of measurement, physiological interpretation and clinical use. Task Force of the European Society of Cardiology and the North American Society of Pacing and Electrophysiology. , 1996 .

[3]  Maggie Orth,et al.  Smart fabric, or "wearable clothing" , 1997, Digest of Papers. First International Symposium on Wearable Computers.

[4]  Antonio Pedotti,et al.  Advancements in Estimating Baroreflex Function Exploring Different Aspects of Autonomic Control of the Heart through the Sequence Technique , 2001 .

[5]  A. Malliani,et al.  Heart rate variability. Standards of measurement, physiological interpretation, and clinical use , 1996 .

[6]  S Cerutti,et al.  Spectral and cross-spectral analysis of heart rate and arterial blood pressure variability signals. , 1986, Computers and biomedical research, an international journal.

[7]  A. Ng,et al.  Unusual limb injury associated with sport parachuting , 2003, British journal of sports medicine.

[8]  S. Pryke,et al.  Civilian parachute injuries; 10 years on and no lessons learned. , 1998, Injury.

[9]  L F Zhang,et al.  Vascular adaptation to microgravity: what have we learned? , 2001, Journal of applied physiology.

[10]  Alan R Hargens,et al.  Human cutaneous vascular responses to whole-body tilting, Gz centrifugation, and LBNP. , 2004, Journal of applied physiology.