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Altered susceptibility to motion sickness as a function of subgravity level

Abstract

Large interindividual differences among 74 normal subjects in the change in susceptibility to motion sickness with effective lifting of the normal g-load by parabolic flight maneuvers were recorded with high test-retest reliability. Most subjects, who were required to make standardized head movements while seated in a chair rotating at a constant speed, demonstrated either a substantial increase or a decrease in susceptibility, in confirmation of a previous study, while a few appeared to be more or less unaffected by the 1 g to 0 g gravitational change. A similar test procedure conducted with eighteen of the subjects at lunar- and Martian-gravity levels revealed further interindividual differences in susceptiblity as a function of g-level. The subjects with gravity-dependent susceptibility revealed: (1) a progressive change in susceptibility as a function of g-load in either the positive or negative direction that was characteristic of the individual, (2) a susceptibility level that appeared to be maintained at the fractional g-load, and (3) immunity to motion sickness at all g-levels tested below the earth standard. The case history as well as ground-based functional and provocative tests of normal subjects proved to be inadequate in predicting susceptibility to motion sickness under subgravity conditions

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