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SECOND
ANNOUNCEMENT
Revised September 23, 2002
SPONSORS
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Universities Space Research Association
CHAIRS
Claire M. Lathers, Rockville, MD
Claes E. Lundgren, Buffalo, NY
Charles F. Sawin, Houston, TX
ORGANIZING
COMMITTEE
John B. Charles, USA
Helmut Hinghofer-Szalkay, Austria
Inessa Kozlovskaya, Russia
Claire M. Lathers, USA
Adrian D. LeBlanc, USA
Claes E. Lundgren, USA
Tadaaki Mano, Japan
Peter Norsk, Denmark
David R. Pendergast, USA
Charles F. Sawin, USA
INVITATION
We are pleased to invite you to participate in THE 5TH INTERNATIONAL HEAD-OUT
WATER IMMERSION SYMPOSIUM, which will be held in Houston, Texas, October
89, 2002. It precedes THE
WORLD SPACE CONGRESS which is being held in Houston October 1019,
2002.
The 5th International
Head-Out Water Immersion Symposium, held for the first time in the United
States, will build upon its predecessors in Graz
in 1999, in Copenhagen in 1995, in Berlin in 1992, and in Bristol in 1989.
The Symposium will serve as a vehicle for the discussion of the effects
of head-out water immersion on physiologic systems, as a therapeutic agent,
and as a ground-based model for space flight. Additional models, such
as head-down tilt, horizontal bed rest, and limb suspension, which mimic
the effects of microgravity will also be discussed during the Symposium.
OBJECTIVES
The Symposium presentations
and discussions are intended to:
- Compare
the strengths and weaknesses of ground-based models for space flight,
including head-out water immersion, horizontal bed rest, 5-degree head
down tilt, and parabolic flight.
- Demonstrate
the changes in protein metabolism with bed rest and space flight.
- Introduce
potential physiological and pharmacological countermeasures for
the consequences of space flight.
- Discuss possible
countermeasures and their efficacy in the bed rest model.
- Discuss lower
body negative pressure as a tool to evaluate orthostatic function
and a potential countermeasure for orthostatic hypotension.
- Present
new material on the quantitative effect of stimuli either increasing
or reducing central blood volume (head-out water immersion / lower body
positive pressure / head-down tilt; head-up tilt/ lower body negative
pressure/ hyper-gravity).
- Discuss what
intensities of such stimuli when combined compensate each other.
- Find out if
different subsystems respond in different ways (i.e., if such a thing
like a 'generally neutralizing combination' exists or not).
- Test
the hypothesis that initial exposure to microgravity may lower muscle
sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) while prolonged exposure to microgravity
may enhance MSNA by analyzing how the neural control of blood pressure
becomes altered by short- and long-term simulation of microgravity.
VENUE
The Symposium will be held at the Center
for Advanced Space Studies at 3600 Bay Area Boulevard, Houston, Texas
77058. The building is located near the NASA Johnson Space Center some
20 miles south of Downtown Houston.
ORAL AND POSTER
PRESENTATIONS
Oral presentations will be organized according to the topics listed below
and will be limited to ten minutes with an additional five minutes for
questions. Support for oral presentations includes dual-screen rear projection
of slides and overheads. An LCD projector with 800 x
600 resolution and a Toshiba satellite laptop (128 MB of RAM, CD-ROM drive,
100 MB Zip drive, running Windows 98 and Microsoft Office 2000) will be
available.
Poster presentations
should also be organized according to the topics listed below, and will
be made during the evening of Tuesday, October 8, 2002. Poster display
space available for authors is 44" x
44". Requests for tables, computers, video equipment, etc., cannot
be honored due to space limitations. Posters may be put up beginning at
8:00 a.m. on October 8, 2002 and remain up through 5:00 p.m. Wednesday,
October 9, 2002.
PROGRAM TOPICS
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Session
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Chairs
|
| Session
I Autonomic Regulation |
C.
Lundgren and A. A. Taylor |
|
Session II Neural Control of Blood Pressure in Humans Exposed
to Short- and Long-Term Simulation of Microgravity |
T.
Mano and M. A. Custaud |
| Session
III Space Flight Physiology |
H.
Hinghofer-Szalkay and G. Pantalos |
| Session
IV Poster Session |
|
| Session
V Ground-Based Models for Space Flight |
J.
Charles and C. Lathers |
| Session
VI Dry Immersion |
I.
Kozlovskaya and C. Sawin |
| Session
VI Diseases on Earth and in Space |
P.
Novak and P. C. Okuysen |
| Session
VIII Pharmacokinetics |
G.
Drusano and A. K. Mitra |
| Session
IX Summary Session Round Table |
|
SYMPOSIUM PUBLICATIONS
Symposium abstracts and preliminary program will be placed online in PDF
format. The Symposium proceedings will be produced on CD-ROM.
REGISTRATION
Pre-registration is required for this meeting. Please check here
for the registration form. Due to the space available for the Symposium,
registration is limited to 100 people. The $250.00 registration fee includes
admission to all scientific sessions, morning and afternoon breaks, two
lunches, a gala banquet, a welcoming reception and poster session, transportation
from the Symposium hotel to the Symposium, and the Symposium proceedings
on CD-ROM.
Please address correspondence
to:
info@dsls.usra.edu
SYMPOSIUM HOTEL
The Hilton Houston NASA Clear Lake, 3000 NASA Road One, Houston, Texas
77058 has been designated as the official Symposium hotel. We have secured
a block of rooms at the special rate of $73.00* (plus applicable state
and local tax) per night. This rate is available from Sunday, October
6, 2002 through Tuesday, October 8, 2002. Please identify yourself as
a HOWI Symposium participant when you call the hotel directly at 800-445-8667
or 281-333-9300; the fax number is 281-333-9748. The deadline for reservations
at the special Symposium rate is September 6, 2002. Individuals will be
asked to guarantee all reservations; a guest will be responsible for payment
of one night's room rental if the reservation is not cancelled 72 hours
prior to scheduled arrival.
*The special rate
is tied to the current U.S. government per diem rate and could fluctuate
accordingly.
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