My first article as a medical student on Medical Bulletin was on Space Sickness.
I have diversified my interests and rarely write on medical matters except atherosclerosis or cholesterol conspiracy.
It took almost 40 years for the astronauts to admit their plight.
That itself is a conspiracy.
It is strange my current obsession is SPACE and bought a book yesterday on Astronomy to browse.
It has few lines on Edwin Hubble (Hubble Telescope was named after him) who is for me the Father of Astronomy!
Reproduction
NASA's yearlong spaceman still is nursing sore feet, stiff legs and fatigue, even after nearly three months back on Earth.
Retired astronaut Scott Kelly gave his first major address to NASA 
employees Wednesday, confiding that while he may have looked good upon 
landing in Kazakhstan at the beginning of March, he didn't feel that 
well after returning from the International Space Station. His 340-day 
mission was the longest single U.S. spaceflight ever.
"When I got out of the Soyuz ... I didn't really look too bad," Kelly 
told a packed auditorium at NASA headquarters in Washington. "But that 
was only because I'm a very good actor. I think I should be nominated 
for an Academy Award.
"My goal here was not to look great. I just had to make sure I didn't 
look worse than the two guys I was with. My colleagues would never let 
me hear the end of it," he added with a smile.
Kelly was accompanied back to Earth by two Russians, one of whom shared his entire nearly yearlong flight.
Back home in Houston, Kelly said he had burning skin, rashes and 
flu-like symptoms. He said he felt so bad that if he hadn't just 
returned from space, he would have gone straight to the emergency room.
"But that's why we do this," he said. "We need to learn these things if we're going to go to Mars."
NASA wants to understand how the body copes with a year of 
weightlessness, as it gears up to send humans on much longer journeys to
 Mars beginning in the 2030s.
Kelly, 52, who retired from NASA shortly after his mission, is now on 
the speaker circuit and working on a book. He and identical twin brother
 Mark, a retired astronaut who took part in his brother's medical 
experiments as a ground subject, sometimes share center stage these 
days. Last week, they were honored at their elementary school in New 
Jersey, now named for them both.
During Wednesday's presentation, which was broadcast to NASA centers 
nationwide, Kelly joked that on the space station, "I changed positions 
so many times, you would have thought I was running for president." No 
longer a civil servant, "I can say that now."
Someone in the audience wanted to know if Kelly ever felt as though he 
had to get off the space station, at any point during his mission.
"I never felt quite like I was climbing the walls," he replied, although
 not even halfway through, "I'm thinking this is a really, really long 
time."
In fact, as his Russian Soyuz capsule approached the orbiting outpost in
 March 2015, Kelly said to himself, "Man, this is probably a really dumb
 idea to be spending a year on the space station." His previous station 
stay, five years earlier, had lasted barely five months.
"This flight was twice as long and I felt twice as bad," he said.
It took Kelly about six months to recover completely from his five-month
 station flight. This time, he said, "I suspect it's probably going to 
be much longer, especially considering how sore my feet still are after 2
 ½ months. But the good news is I do feel better all the time."
 
 
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