Exercise in space: the European Space Agency approach to in-flight exercise countermeasures for long-duration missions on ISS

ConclusionIncreased or unchanged absolute exercise workloads in-flight would appear contradictory to typical post-flight reductions in muscle mass and strength, and cardiovascular capacity following LDMs. However, increased absolute in-flight workloads are not directly linked to changes in exercise capacity as they likely also reflect the planned, conservative loading early in the mission to allow adaption to µG exercise, including personal comfort issues with novel exercise hardware (e.g. the treadmill harness). Inconsistency in hardware and individualised support concepts across time limit the comparability of results from different crewmembers, and questions regarding the difference between cycling a nd running in µG versus identical exercise here on Earth, and other factors that might influence in-flight exercise performance, still require further investigation.
Source: Extreme Physiology and Medicine - Category: Physiology Source Type: research