Space Medicine Archives

CPOD: A Personal “Black Box”

lifeguard1 strip CPOD: A Personal Black Box
The Washigton Post reports that NASA is developing a personal health monitor, that is similar to a blackbox found on planes.
NASA describes its device:

cpod sm CPOD: A Personal Black BoxIt’s a compact, portable, wearable device — a single piece of equipment that gathers a wide variety of vital signs. About the size of a computer mouse, a CPOD is worn around the waist. It’s comfortable enough to be worn while sleeping. It’s non-invasive. It takes only minutes to don. Importantly, it can track a person’s physiologic functioning as they go about their normal routine — they don’t have to be tethered to some stationary device. It can store data for eight-hour periods for later downloading; alternatively, it can send it wirelessly, in real time, to some other device…
The CPOD typically tracks heart performance, blood pressure, respiration, temperature, and blood oxygen levels. Using three tiny accelerometers, it also tracks a person’s movements — it can tell whether they’re running, for example, or spinning or tumbling.
And it can be reconfigured. If researchers choose, almost any kind of sensor could be plugged into the device. The CPOD could, for example, keep track of ambient air pressure, or monitor the concentrations of atmospheric gases.

To read more about the device at NASA…

Artificial Skin for Robots

Artificial Skin for Robots

This gadget isn’t likely to immediately impact your health (unless you’re an android) but NASA is developing a tactile skin-like sensor wrap for its spacefaring robots:

Lumelsky, until recently a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has begun setting up a laboratory at Goddard to develop a high-tech covering that would enable robots to sense their environment and react to it, much like humans respond when something or someone touches their skin….

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Short-Radius Centrifuge at NASA

Short-Radius Centrifuge at NASA

NASA has a new tool to study the physiologic effects of microgravity:

For the first time, researchers will systematically study how artificial gravity may serve as a countermeasure to prolonged simulated weightlessness.

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Space-age medicine for earthly practices

Space-age medicine for earthly practices

The American Medical News, an official AMA publication, reviews some of the latest technologies coming out of NASA:

Babs R. Soller, PhD, associate professor of anesthesiology, surgery and biomedical engineering at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, is heading a research project that is refining near infrared spectroscopic techniques to provide needle-free blood and tissue measurements.

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