Short-term suborbital space flight curtails astronauts’ dopamine levels increasing cortisol/BDNF and prompting pro-oxidative/inflammatory milieu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR|Updated:2025-12-13
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Short-term suborbital space flight curtails astronauts’ dopamine levels increasing cortisol/BDNF and prompting pro-oxidative/inflammatory milieu
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Military Medical ResearchVol. 12, Issue 8, Pages: 1323-1325(2025)
Affiliations:
1.Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Padova, 35129 Padua, Italy
2.Italian Air Force Medical Service, 00175 Rome, Italy
3.Institute of Clinical Physiology, National Research Council (IFC-CNR), 20162 Milan, Italy
4.Division of Cardiology, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA
Author bio:
* Tommaso Antonio Giacon tommasoantonio.giacon@studenti.unipd.it
Gerardo Bosco, Angelo Landolfi, Tommaso Antonio Giacon, et al. Short-term suborbital space flight curtails astronauts’ dopamine levels increasing cortisol/BDNF and prompting pro-oxidative/inflammatory milieu[J]. Military Medical Research, 2025, 12(8): 1323-1325.
DOI:
Gerardo Bosco, Angelo Landolfi, Tommaso Antonio Giacon, et al. Short-term suborbital space flight curtails astronauts’ dopamine levels increasing cortisol/BDNF and prompting pro-oxidative/inflammatory milieu[J]. Military Medical Research, 2025, 12(8): 1323-1325. DOI: 10.1186/s40779-025-00589-0.
Short-term suborbital space flight curtails astronauts’ dopamine levels increasing cortisol/BDNF and prompting pro-oxidative/inflammatory milieu