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Yes, it's rocket science: Professor explores surgery in space(Forwarded)



 
 
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Default Yes, it's rocket science: Professor explores surgery in space(Forwarded)

Department of Public Affairs
University of Toronto
Toronto, Canada

Contact:
Elizabeth Raymer, Communications Officer
(416) 946-3052

February 6, 2006

Yes, it's rocket science: Professor explores surgery in space
By Elizabeth Raymer

If scientists can put a man on the moon, or send him into space for a few
years at time, can they enable astronauts to perform complex surgical
procedures there, too?

Professor Adam Dubrowksi of surgery doesn't see why not, and he's making
space surgery a focus of his research. There'll be a need for it once
astronauts in the International Space Station begin to stay on board for
extended periods, says Dubrowski, who is also a kinesiologist in the
Surgical Skills Centre at Mount Sinai Hospital. The U.S. National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Canadian Space Agency
(CSA) are also looking towards a mission to Mars, a journey that will take
three to four years each way.

"The longer you stay, the more potential there is for things to happen,"
Dubrowski points out, noting that lacerations and trauma injuries are
certainly possible. Currently, astronauts get a few hours of medical
training on the ground, which is insufficient for treating more serious
injuries, he says. Although typically a medical doctor is on board the
space station, "everybody has to know a bit of everything." On longer
missions, he anticipates having a physician and a highly skilled medical
assistant who are both trained in surgery, while the rest of the crew will
be trained in the basics.

Currently, emergencies are dealt with on board the space station and
surgery can be performed using a remote-controlled robot. But as
spaceships get further away from Earth, robotic surgery is no longer
possible because the signals take longer to reach the mission, Dubrowski
explains. And "no one understands what happens when you're in zero
gravity" and need to suture or staple a wounded person.

So Dubrowski, his wife, Waterloo kinesiology professor Heather Carnahan,
and Dr. Gary Gray, a Canadian Space Agency consultant from Defence
Research and Development Canada, hope to explore these questions with CSA
funding. The three have already conducted zero-gravity research into basic
motor skills such as touching one's nose or tying one's shoes. A
weightless environment affects a person's hand-eye co-ordination, aim and
ability to apply a certain amount of force when undertaking tasks, he
says. Dubrowski's interest in space research began after he received his
PhD in kinesiology in 2001 from the University of Waterloo. A native of
Poland who immigrated to the Toronto area, Dubrowski was influenced by a
visit to Dr. Otmar Bock, a leading German researcher in zero-gravity,
following completion of his doctoral studies. The two maintained a
collaboration, which helped Dubrowski get funding from the European Space
Agency and the German Space Agency.

Now, the Canadian Space Agency plans to develop a surgery training
protocol for astronauts and Dubrowski, Carnahan and Gray -- with the
support of the experts from the Surgical Skills Centre and the Wilson
Centre -- plan to bid for the contract. At the same time, they will be
applying for smaller funds for parabolic flight research.

Space-surgery training will be three-pronged, Dubrowski explains. The
first step is adaptation to zero gravity using an inverted paradigm in
which experimental participants are placed upside down on something
similar to a bed to "get more of an idea of weightlessness."

The second step will be simulating zero gravity in a swimming pool;
Dubrowski and Surgical Skills Centre manager Lisa Satterthwaite are
working on procuring something similar to the huge swimming pool with the
replica of the space station used in the NASA centre in Houston. "You can
adjust the buoyancy of the person so they're suspended in water,"
Dubrowski says. "That's another way of simulating zero gravity."

Third, trainees will take their basic surgery skills on parabolic flights
in which an airplane ascends and descends roughly 40 times, creating a
transient zero-gravity environment on the descents. Dubrowski uses a
variety of simple and complex simulators to allow students at the Surgical
Skills Centre to practise skills such as stitching with skin patches.

Surgery in space isn't that far away, Dubrowksi predicts; there are plans
to put a manned lunar base on the moon in the next five to 10 years, which
will necessitate better surgical skills for the longer missions. And the
sooner the better, he says.


 




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