Space Walks
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Jolie Bookspan, M.Ed, PhD, FAWM

The space shuttle Endeavour landed yesterday at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Endeavour's two-week assignment to the International Space Station was shortened for safety arrangements concerning Hurricane Dean.


Air pressure around us keeps nitrogen gas dissolved all over in our body all the time. When you go up a mountain, in a high airflight, or on an EVA, there is less surrounding pressure. Nitrogen becomes undissolved. If you reduce pressure slowly enough, nitrogen comes out peaceably and you can breathe it out. If you come up from a scuba dive or jump out for your EVA too fast, nitrogen offgases too fast, making bubbles, which are believed to be the basis of decompression sickness. Beside the role of exercise in countermeasures for space health and after returning, exercise is one of several factors affecting risk of decompression sickness. The post Exercise and Fitness in Decompression Sickness Risk explains.
If you could start an EVA with less nitrogen in your body, you could reduce your risk of decompression sickness. Crew preparing for an EVA do lengthy de-nitrogenation procedures. They breathe oxygen instead of air, and do physical exercise to "wash-out" nitrogen in several stages taking many hours. One goal of aviation scientists is to develop faster protocols for denitrogenation without increasing risk of decompression sickness during EVA.
American and Russian space programs use different denitrogenation protocols and different EVA suits. Russians use EMUs with higher suit pressure. The American suit design uses lower pressure, making it more flexible and maneuverable. The lower pressure suit is considered riskier for decompression sickness, and needs longer prebreathing and denitrogenation exercise. The Russian suit, higher pressure inside, is stiffer, needing more muscle to move. My Russian scientist friends say it is like the AK-47 - tough but good. My American scientist colleagues state that the Russian egress suit is a bull, lacking dexterity. My Russians reply they don't need it, as their vehicles, suits (and cosmonauts) are built strong and austerely, not needing fussy fine-tuning. Da.
My crew surgeon friends from both agencies are all submerged in triplicate paper forms for permissions to send me mission stories and photos to post for you. Nice that everyone can feel universally understood.
Related:
- Indiana Jones Rocket Sled
- Exercise and Medicine Underwater and at High Pressure
- Exercise and Fitness in Decompression Sickness Risk
- How To Stay Underwater For A Month
- Collapsing Astronaut Gives Healthy Reminder
- Altitude Sickness, Viagra, and Bubbles on Flights
- Altitude Sickness on Flights
- Living Under The Sea
- Helium Speech - An Astronaut Calls the President of the United States
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Read success stories and send your own.
See if your answers are already here - click Fitness Fixer labels, links, archives, and Index.
Subscribe free - updates via e-mail or RSS, upper right.
For personal medical questions - Replies to Medical Questions.
Limited Class space for personal feedback. Top students may earn certification through DrBookspan.com/Academy. Learn more in Dr. Bookspan's Books.
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Endeavour STS-118 on Pad39A photo by jurvetson
Endeavour STS-118 blastoff by jurvetson
STS-116 Spacewalk over Cook Strait New Zealand photo by elroySF
Endeavour STS-118 blastoff by jurvetson
STS-116 Spacewalk over Cook Strait New Zealand photo by elroySF
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