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Adv Space Res ; 34(7): 1598-601, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15880898

ABSTRACT

Humans taking part in parabolic aircraft flights (PAFs) may suffer from space motion sickness (SMS, a kinetosis). Since it has been repeatedly shown earlier that some fish of a given batch also reveal a kinetotic behavior during PAFs (especially so-called spinning movements and looping responses) and due to the homology of the vestibular apparatus among all vertebrates, fish can be used as model systems to investigate the origin of susceptibility to motion sickness. Therefore, we examined the utricular maculae (they are responsible for the internalization of gravity in teleosteans) of fish swimming kinetotically at microgravity in comparison with animals from the same batch who swam normally. On the histological level, it was found that the total number of both sensory and supporting cells of the utricular maculae did not differ between kinetotic animals as compared to normally swimming fish. Cell density (sensory and supporting cells/100 micrometers2), however, was reduced in kinetotic animals (p<0.0001), which seemed to be due to malformed epithelial cells (increase in cell size) of the kinetotic specimens. Susceptibility to kinetoses may therefore originate in malformed sensory epithelia.


Subject(s)
Gravity Sensing/physiology , Motion Sickness/pathology , Saccule and Utricle/pathology , Space Flight , Weightlessness/adverse effects , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Cell Count , Disease Models, Animal , Larva , Otolithic Membrane/pathology , Saccule and Utricle/cytology , Swimming/physiology , Tilapia
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