Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Could Trip to Mars Cause Alzheimer's?

AFP
  1. Could Trip to Mars Cause Alzheimer's?
    Yahoo! News (blog) ‎- 4 hours ago
    From Yahoo! News: Three-Year Trip to Mars Exposes Space Travelers to Dangerous Radiation.

    Could Trip to Mars Cause Alzheimer's?

    Space travel has always been portrayed as risky -- no air or water, extreme temperatures -- a place where even a small miscalculation can be fatal. It can also be hazardous to your brain health, particularly on a three-year-long mission to Mars, according to a study published this week in the scientific journal PLOS ONE.
    The eight-year long study, conducted at the NASA Space Radiation Laboratory at Brookhaven National Laboratory on New York's Long Island, found that the cosmic radiation on such a mission could accelerate the onset of Alzheimer's disease.
    NASA is working on sending astronauts to a passing asteroid in the 2020s, and talks of a trip to Mars in the 2030s. It would take three years, with current technology, to get there and back. Current spacecraft are not heavily shielded from the cosmic radiation crew members would encounter beyond Earth's protective magnetic field.
    Researchers used mice that were genetically engineered to be predisposed to Alzheimer's disease. They exposed them to cosmic radiation that was simulated in the lab.
    "Galactic cosmic radiation poses a significant threat to future astronauts," said Dr. M. Kerry O'Banion, senior author and professor of neurobiology and anatomy at the University of Rochester Medical Center.
    The study team wanted to see if radiation had the potential to accelerate Alzheimer's in those who were genetically vulnerable. Mouse models have been used extensively in this type of research and the rate at which they develop the disease is well understood.
    Scientists have long worried about the potential dangers of working and living in deep space. Cosmic radiation beyond low Earth orbit, researchers say, could lead to cancer, cardiovascular disease, even cataracts.
    Radiation exposure can cause acute effects such as nausea, vomiting, fatigue, skin injury and changes to white blood cell counts and the immune system, according to the National Space Biomedical Research Institute. Longer-term radiation effects include damage to the eyes, gastrointestinal system, lungs and central nervous system.
    On Earth, humans are protected by the planet's atmosphere and magnetic field. Crew members on the International Space Station, at an altitude of 200 miles, are still within the magnetic sheath that surrounds us. The 24 Apollo astronauts who flew to the moon between 1969 and 1972 were not protected, but the longest missions lasted less than two weeks.
    Once out of low orbit, astronauts are exposed to showers of different radioactive particles. Though engineers say they can protect themselves from the radiation associated with solar flares, so far, they cannot block other forms of cosmic radiation.
    The longer astronauts are in deep space, the greater the exposure to this low-level radiation.
    This is the first such study to explore effects of radiation on the nervous system, a phenomenon known as neurodegeneration, according to the authors.
    "The possibility that radiation exposure in space may give rise to health problems such as cancer has long been recognized," said O'Banion. "However, this study shows for the first time that exposure to radiation levels equivalent to a mission to Mars could produce cognitive problems and speed up changes in the brain that are associated with Alzheimer's disease."
    O'Banion has spent the last 20 years studying Alzheimer's disease.
    He and his fellow researchers studied a form of radiation from so-called high-mass, high-charged particles, which come in various forms and fly through space at high speeds. Some come from distant stars that have exploded.
    At Brookhaven, where a portion of the research was conducted, particle accelerators were able to recreate some of the radioactive particles found in space.
    "It is extremely difficult from an engineering perspective to effectively shield against them," said O'Banion. "One would have to essentially wrap a spacecraft in a six-foot block of lead or concrete."
    For the study, researchers used mice that had been engineered to have two human gene mutations associated with familial Alzheimer's.
    "Essentially, they were healthy mice with nasty genes," said O'Banion. Under natural conditions, mice do not get the disease.
    The mice were exposed to the radiation for several minutes. Six months later, researchers evaluated the exposure to see if it had any effect.
    "A minute or two [of exposure] is like three years in human life," O'Banion said. "It's apples and oranges, a very different kind of exposure, but the total dose is equivalent to what an astronaut would receive [on a three-year Mars mission]."
    Cosmic radiation is unlike anything on earth, according to O'Banion, similar only to what might be experienced in a nuclear accident.
    "The big problem NASA faces is that shielding is not effective, and a spacecraft is not bulky enough to protect them over long periods of travel," said O'Banion. "At least not now. In scenarios I have heard of sending people to Mars, they would then build an underground shelter on a long-term mission in order to protect them from radiation."
    While the research does not solve the problem of radiation in space or explain why humans develop Alzheimer's disease, it is important, according to O'Banion.
    "My own bias is this," he said. "It's just another example of how the environment can influence diseases. The mice had a genetic predisposition and you have added an environmental injury -- an insult to their system. And now they show exacerbation of the disease."
    There may even be parallels with the development of the disease after brain injuries in football players, he said.
    Jeff Chancellor, a scientist in radiation physics at the National Space Biomedical Research Institute, said the Rochester team's study is solid.
    "I know most of the authors and they are very well respected, and I have full confidence in their results," he said. . "The main benefit of their research is being able to further enhance the field and perhaps provide justification for more research."
    "Any time you identify a mechanism for how a disease or a condition is induced, you further the ability to mitigate it," he said. "It provides more tools for the researchers and for M.D.s ... There are great benefits to all these studies."
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    Whenever we leave the atmosphere of earth it causes problems for humans. For example, my heart problem that happened when I made the accidental mistake of flying home from Hawaii during the exact time of a Solar Flare hitting earth then created initially a problem for me personally. So, until I was able to get properly diagnosed what was wrong with me my wife thought for a while I was slowly getting  early Alzheimers or early senile dementia until my doctor by accident had me take  two sonograms, a carotid sonogram and a heart sonogram. Then I was diagnosed with reduced heart compression and told I was recieiving 1/3 less blood to my brain. At which point I started taking lisinopril (the ace inhibitor) and baby aspirin (after a difficult first month of trying to take Coreg which I was allergic to which was a disaster). But, I was able to return to my normal mental faculties by taking lisinopril(ace inhibitor) . So, immediately after I started taking lisinopril I was fine again. So, even flying in a jet above 20,000 to 30,000 feet can bring on these kinds of symptoms if there is a solar flare hitting earth at the time you are flying if you have an older heart or a previously diagnosed heart condition. (I did have a heart virus that I almost died from in 1998 and 1999) but had recovered from that by 2000. 
    However, now I realize I have a 90% chance of being alive this time next year because of getting properly diagnosed. But, what about the 90% of the people on earth who aren't proactive or lucky enough who find themselves in a situation like I was in who have an older heart or previously diagnosed condition that then fly during a Solar Flare hitting earth and don't know they were exposed?
    So, what I'm saying is it is not limited to space that one can be affected and even going to the Polar Circles with a heart condition on the ground can give you the same problems because of holes in the magnetosphere if you go there during a hole and a solar flare for all the pretty Aurora Borealis effects on a vacation. So, even though anyone who goes out beyond our atmosphere can never have children again male or female, flying above 20,000 to 30,000 feet can bring on Alzheimers and senile dementia affects (hopefully temporary) under some conditions. 

    Also, even Richard Branson's Space trips will sterilize anyone doing that too because of exposure to Cosmic Rays. 

    If you read Corso's book, "The Day After Roswell" which seems to be the definitive one to read regarding Roswell, it appears that the way they traveled was by moving through both time and space rather than how we do it. By not traveling to other places the way we do likely then we could still have children at another location and colonize. But first, we need the technology to bypass both time and space and thereby bypass sterilization that happens to anyone who goes into space or even near space. 

    So, this (New technology at least for us) is necessary for us to develop in order to colonize other worlds and still be able to breed when we got there. But also, we need to make sure that the worlds we want to colonize have good magnetospheres, because without a good one we cannot reproduce. Also, the magnetosphere of earth is weakening at present as well. So, it is unknown how long we will be able to have children and to reproduce here as well. We could have 100 to 1000 or 10,000 years so that is unknown as well at present even regarding life here on earth.

    So, maybe if we want to still be able to have children here on earth we might want to figure out how to repair our magnetosphere or move underground so we are less affected at least during the nights when we sleep.

    Since we are mammals and many mammals survived by living underground in holes and caves and dens maybe that might be what we need to do to survive the weakening magnetosphere too in order to be able to continue to have children. So, underground housing might be useful for continuing to have kids for humans.

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