A goggles-like head-mounted device equipped with several non-invasive techniques for quantitative medical evaluation of the eye, skin, and brain is envisioned for monitoring the health of astronauts and cosmonauts during long-term space travel and exploration. Real-time non-invasive evaluation of the different structures within these organs will provide indices of the health of these organs, as well as the entire body. The techniques such as dynamic light scattering (for the early detection of cataracts to evaluate effects of cosmic radiation), corneal autofluorescence (to assess extracellular matrix biology (e.g., diabetes), optical polarization (of aqueous fluid to evaluate serum chemistry), laser Doppler velocimetry (of retinal, optic nerve, and choroidal blood flow to assess ocular as well as central nervous system blood flow), reflectometry/oximetry (for oxygen metabolism), optical coherence tomography (for retinal microstructure), and possibly scanning laser technology for intraocular imaging and scanning will be integrated into this compact device. Skin sensors will also be mounted on the portion of the device in contact with the periocular tissues. This will enable monitoring of body temperature, electrolyte status and EEG. This device will monitor astronaut health during long-duration space travel by detecting aberrations from pre-established "norms", enabling prompt initiation of early preventative/curative therapy.

Celestial and terrestrial tele-ophthalmology: A health monitoring helmet for astronaut/cosmonaut and general public use / Ansari, R. R.; Rovati, L.; Sebag, J.. - 4245:(2001), pp. 177-185. (Intervento presentato al convegno Spie Photonic West tenutosi a S. Francisco nel 2001) [10.1117/12.429269].

Celestial and terrestrial tele-ophthalmology: A health monitoring helmet for astronaut/cosmonaut and general public use

Rovati L.
;
2001

Abstract

A goggles-like head-mounted device equipped with several non-invasive techniques for quantitative medical evaluation of the eye, skin, and brain is envisioned for monitoring the health of astronauts and cosmonauts during long-term space travel and exploration. Real-time non-invasive evaluation of the different structures within these organs will provide indices of the health of these organs, as well as the entire body. The techniques such as dynamic light scattering (for the early detection of cataracts to evaluate effects of cosmic radiation), corneal autofluorescence (to assess extracellular matrix biology (e.g., diabetes), optical polarization (of aqueous fluid to evaluate serum chemistry), laser Doppler velocimetry (of retinal, optic nerve, and choroidal blood flow to assess ocular as well as central nervous system blood flow), reflectometry/oximetry (for oxygen metabolism), optical coherence tomography (for retinal microstructure), and possibly scanning laser technology for intraocular imaging and scanning will be integrated into this compact device. Skin sensors will also be mounted on the portion of the device in contact with the periocular tissues. This will enable monitoring of body temperature, electrolyte status and EEG. This device will monitor astronaut health during long-duration space travel by detecting aberrations from pre-established "norms", enabling prompt initiation of early preventative/curative therapy.
2001
Spie Photonic West
S. Francisco
2001
4245
177
185
Ansari, R. R.; Rovati, L.; Sebag, J.
Celestial and terrestrial tele-ophthalmology: A health monitoring helmet for astronaut/cosmonaut and general public use / Ansari, R. R.; Rovati, L.; Sebag, J.. - 4245:(2001), pp. 177-185. (Intervento presentato al convegno Spie Photonic West tenutosi a S. Francisco nel 2001) [10.1117/12.429269].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1215145
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