NASA and NIH Partner for Health Research in Space

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Sept. 12, 2007

John Yembrick
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0602
john.yembrick-1@xxxxxxxx

Bonnie Flock
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.
301-451-4343
flockb@xxxxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 07-190

NASA AND NIH PARTNER FOR HEALTH RESEARCH IN SPACE

WASHINGTON - A Sept. 12 signing of a memorandum of understanding 
marked a key milestone for NASA and the National Institutes of Health 
in their long partnership to advance scientific discovery. The two 
agencies entered into an agreement that helps American scientists use 
the International Space Station to answer questions about human 
health and diseases. The pact signals to researchers the availability 
of a remarkable platform on which to conduct experiments. 

"The congressional designation as a national laboratory underscores 
the significance the American people place on the scientific 
potential of the space station," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin 
explained. "Not only will the station help in our efforts to explore 
the moon, Mars and beyond, its resources also can be applied for a 
much broader purpose - improving human health." 

NASA sent Congress a plan in May describing how the U.S. segment of 
the International Space Station can be used as a national laboratory. 
The report outlines possible partnerships with other government 
agencies and private companies to conduct research aboard the 
station. The signing marks the first such agreement between NASA and 
another agency. 

"I am extremely pleased that this collaborative effort is moving 
forward," NIH Director Elias A. Zerhouni said. "The station provides 
a unique environment where researchers can explore fundamental 
questions about human health issues - including how the human body 
heals itself, fights infection or develops diseases such as cancer or 
osteoporosis."

Compared with the Earth-bound laboratories where more than 325,000 
NIH-funded researchers conduct experiments every day, the facility at 
the station provides a virtually gravity-free environment where the 
cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie human diseases can be 
explored. For example:

- Since the beginning of the space program, researchers have known 
that prolonged periods of weightlessness cause bones and muscles to 
deteriorate. The station provides a stable platform where scientists 
can study the molecular basis of these effects for the eventual 
benefit of people who suffer from weak, fragile bones or 
muscle-wasting diseases. 

- When people escape the gravitational pull of Earth, their brains 
also need to adjust to the sensation of weightlessness. Understanding 
how in space parts of the brain compensate for the absence of sensory 
input that gravity provides on Earth holds promise for people who 
suffer from balance disorders. 

- Other biologic systems in humans and in other organisms also are 
affected by microgravity. A biologic explanation for observed changes 
in microbe infectivity and human immunity during prolonged space 
travel could offer new hope to people who have difficulty fighting 
infections on Earth. 

As part of the agreement, NIH and NASA will encourage space-related 
health research by exchanging information and providing technical 
expertise in areas of common interest. The agencies will facilitate 
and share each other's research and development efforts. In addition, 
NIH and NASA have agreed to coordinate publicity of mutually 
beneficial activities, publications and research results.

For more information about NIH and its programs, visit:

http://www.nih.gov

For more information about the station and the agreement, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

	
-end-



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