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'Pillownauts' help future human missions to Mars

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Northerner

Admin (Retired)
Relationship to Diabetes
Type 1
Scientists at the University of Nottingham are enlisting the help of 'pillownauts' to push back the boundaries of space travel in a new study to examine a potentially serious adverse effect of weightlessness on the human body.

The 3-day bed rest study is being carried out in Nottingham in parallel to a 60-day bed rest study by the European Space Agency at the MEDES facility in Toulouse, France. Bed rest is a tried and tested way to measure the effects of weightlessness on the human body which include bone and muscle mass loss, cardiovascular decline and impaired carbohydrate metabolism which could be a risk for type 2 diabetes.


https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/02/180208144419.htm
 
I’m in fine condition if they want volunteers. I like bed.:D
 
I'd willingly volunteer to lay in bed for three days, especially if wine is provided :D
 
I went to the University of Nottingham in the 1970s. I was obviously ahead of my time........
 
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