Historically, spaceflight has been reserved for the very healthy. Astronauts are selected for their ability to meet the highest physical and psychological standards to prepare them for any unknown challenges, researchers said.
However, with the advent of commercial spaceflight, average people can now fly for enjoyment.
The aerospace medicine group at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston has studied how average people with common medical problems - high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, lung diseases like asthma or emphysema and back and neck injuries, surgeries or disorders - would be able to tolerate the stresses of commercial spaceflight.
"Physiological stresses of flight include increased acceleration forces, or 'G-forces,' during launch and re-entry, as well as the microgravity period," said lead author Dr Rebecca Blue.
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"Our goal was to see how average people with common medical problems, who aren't necessarily as fit as a career astronaut, would be able to tolerate these stresses of an anticipated commercial spaceflight," Blue said.
The researchers studied how people with common medical conditions performed when put through centrifuge simulations of spaceflight launch and re-entry.
The acceleration forces expected in a commercial spaceflight profile are tolerable, but can be uncomfortable, for healthy individuals.
The researchers wanted to see if they were equally tolerable for individuals with complex medical histories or whether there were certain conditions that would make it more difficult for them to handle the flight.
"This study further supports the belief that, despite significant chronic medical conditions, the dream of spaceflight is one that most people can achieve," said Blue.
The study appears in the journal Aviation, Space and Environmental Medicine.