(UPI) --
If you're a mouse, having spent your whole life in a laboratory, you
might relish the chance a trip to space. Unfortunately, new research
suggest the price is nascent liver damage.
In 2011, a group of mice took a 13.5-day ride on the final
Atlantis space shuttle flight. When they returned, a variety of research
teams shared their internal organs.
Researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical
Campus got the mice livers. As their newly published analysis shows,
liver health of the mice was compromised.
"We saw the beginning of nascent liver damage in just 13.5
days," lead researcher Karen Jonscher said in a news release. "The mice
also lost lean muscle mass. We have seen this same phenomenon in humans
on bed rest -- muscles atrophy and proteins break down into amino
acids."
"The question is, how does that affect your liver?" Jonscher asked.
Scientists have been closely monitoring the effects of
spaceflight on human health, but most research has focused on the
effects of microgravity on bones, muscles and the brain, as well as the
cardiovascular system.
Previous studies have shown astronauts often return with
symptoms of prediabetes. Though the symptoms quickly resolved on their
own, the discoveries suggested liver and metabolic issues may arise
during space travel.
With the latest findings, detailed in the journal PLOS ONE, researchers have further confirmation on such suspicions.
Now, researchers must work to better understand the risk. A
trip to Mars will see astronauts spend at least a year in space. What
sort of pressure would this put on the liver?
To find out, researchers need to look at liver health in mice and humans over long periods of time in space.
"Whether or not this is a problem is an open question,"
Jonscher said. "We need to look at mice involved in longer duration
space flight to see if there are compensatory mechanisms that come into
play that might protect them from serious damage."
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