Page 11 September 25, 1996 stronaut faces medical problems slam evtl &M Men’s Tenni; advanced tot!« he T. Rowe Prici npionship in Ba: jesday. Tori be;| /-6, 6-0, and » * aard of Boise Sti m. The Aggie j® the second rour! Ed in Hrvanovic ih, 4-6, 6-3,6-0: team with A&M: use in the doubs tournament, o. 4 seeded tar® DeChaunac and of Ole Miss. Ocj ostponned until ness. i eliminate layoff N (AP) — Bofe r hits in his firsts' on, leading Newit i over Houston® out the Metswet ninate the Astros ral Division race, agic number of® red the divisionai victory over the I :es before the As |PACE CENTER, Houston (AP) stronaut Shannon Lucid can |ect to feel weak, woozy, wob- fatigued and much heavier jn her 150 pounds when she lounters Earth’s gravity for the time in six months, he can also figure on being mic and having a depressed rune system. octors have no idea what to expect when the shuttle {intis brings home America’s ce-endurance champion on rsday. pace travelers erally overcome 1st of the side ef- |s within weeks months. Only other woman, Russian, has ne close to nding this !ch time in orbit, the other long- |m space fliers ebeen men. the 53-year traight loss rrs move! loser to tit ), Calif. (AP) - Mi t a two-run homer ;r added a two-njn fexas Rangers redi number in the All a 7-3 victory Tui kland Athletics. >ers began the da] lead over the Seal ho played at Calto night. hshed 3-6 onaltte Lucid have a higher risk of de- oping osteoporosis because of the bone lost during her 188 ['s of weightlessness? What >ut cancer from space radia- i? Could her life be shortened? That’s the sort of thing that 20 years from now maybe we’ll re an answer to,” said Dr. Roger . , Jica, chief of medical opera- t ^ SeVeS 15 at Johnson Space Center. “In meantime, it is a concern, not [cause we think that we’re ttingthem in increased risk but. cause we want to make sure itwe’re not.” Lucid began the final leg of her ;-awaited journey home when lantis undocked from the Russ- space station Mir on Monday night. She had been living on the orbiting complex since March. “Do svidaniya,” Lucid called out to the three men left behind on Mir — goodbye in Russian — as Atlantis slipped into the black ness of space. Her replacement on Mir, NASA astronaut John Blaha, was moved by the sight of the departing shut tle, which will return in January to pick him up. “Wow, it’s a sight that I’ll never forget,” he said. Astronauts and cosmonauts can lose up to 25 per cent of their strength while in orbit because in zero gravity there’s little need to use the muscles. They also lose bone, for reasons that aren’t entirely clear. Often, they feel lightheaded upon return to Earth when the blood shifts back into the lower body. And they feel heavy because they are unaccus tomed to the pull of gravity. Lucid, who has a Ph.D. in bio chemistry, has insisted she feels fine and said her weight has re mained fairly steady. She exer cised on Mir’s treadmill, station ary cycle and other equipment up to two hours a day to fight bone and muscle loss. NASA has no mission-duration limit for its astronauts. The world record is held by Dr. Valery Polyakov, a Russian cosmonaut whose 438-day Mir mission end ed last year. He seems to have come out of it well. So has cosmo naut Yelena Kondakova, whose Space + effects % Weightlessness causes the flooding of body fluids in the upper body. In space, the face and upper body is enlarged, and legs may become very skinny. Aside from fatigue and wooziness, the bodily changes astronauts undergo: Muscle loss in hips, legs and lower ■ spine. “There’s defi nitely some psy chological readaptation.” Dr. Roger Billica Chief of medical opera tions, Johnson Space Center Bones, along B /]) • with muscles, 1 1 11 weaken. About 25 percent of strength is lost. Source: NASA Due to fluid shift, heart becomes smaller as blood and other fluids redistribute. Back on Earth, blood and other body fluids move from the torso, head and upper body back to the legs and the lower body. 169-day Mir mission was the longest spaceflight by a woman until Lucid eclipsed that record earlier this month. As soon as Atlantis lands, Lu cid will be carried from the shut tle on a stretcher for her own safety and to allow doctors to take her blood pressure and oth er vital signs. She will stand up only when she feels ready. A NASA flight surgeon will be constantly at her side, even after she returns home to Houston with her husband and three chil dren. Others doctors will be on call, as well as a dietitian, physical therapist and psychologist. “There’s definitely some psy chological readaptation,” Billica said. “They’ve been isolated, con fined and remote, and now it’s time to come home and it’s time to re-establish routines and re-es tablish relationships and that takes a little bit of doing.” After a few days of rest, Lucid will begin a two- to three-week re habilitation program of swim ming pool exercises, sessions on a reclining stationary cycle, mas sage, physical therapy and what ever else she wants. If Lucid wants to take a vaca tion before she returns to work and starts handling the hun dreds of requests for interviews and public appearances, that’s fine, too, said Frank Culbertson, director of NASA’s shuttle-Mir program. Because of her high-level job at NASA, which pays $75,000 to $98,000 a year, Lucid can forget about overtime pay for her non stop work in orbit. oping with Cancer ancer patients discriminated against in therapeutic jobs GLEN COVE, N.Y. (AP) — When leKarushchkat was recuperating bmcancer, she longed for the rou- yheaMmotivation her job provid- iii mUiitme week after her first lemotherapy treatment, she was from page 9 ™ 1 thought 1 was being called to tdictation,” the former legal jcretary recalled. Instead, idershipthisseaso; rushchkat — who missed five ; also said the Lady >k to the senior lior, she has aleai Kleinecke said, irk with Nancy(0 Ip lead the fresh® .mg team (sof work after a mastectomy — fshe was told: “I can’t afford to :pyou anymore.” "I couldn’t believe what I was ■ring,” said Karushchkat, 45. She knows what ie voice inside my head was vhat it takes town hould, justbeci jgressive in pul earning, ‘You can’t do that! You is one weakness (tdothat! ne, Kleineckesaidi But they do. Employees with to quickly dispo* icer are fired or laid off five times its. often as others, according to a she’s not as a® vey issued Tuesday by Working needs to be,”i men magazine and Amgen, a “She might lets« ousand Oaks, Calif., company ith her a little loft makes drugs to lessen motherapy side effects. And when cancer patients do keep their jobs, they are often stripped of important duties by su pervisors who believe the treatment will slow the workers down. One in 14 cancer survivors (7 percent) interviewed said they were fired or laid off because of their ill ness. Of all American workers, only one in 80 (1.3 percent) was fired or laid off in 1995, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The May telephone survey in cluded interviews with 100 supervi sors, 100 co-workers and 500 can cer survivors who worked while undergoing treatment. Eighty-five percent of supervi sors said they believe the cancer survivors who worked for them suf- fered fatigue while undergoing chemotherapy. Seventy-four per cent of the supervisors also cited nausea, yet only 33 percent of the cancer patients had that side effect. “Today a majority of patients are treated as outpatients and there are new medicines that dramatically reduce and often eliminate chemotherapy side effects like low blood counts, nausea,” said Dr. Ellen Gold, a hematologist-oncolo gist at Beth Israel Medical Center. “It seems (employers) just aren’t aware of that yet.” Most treatments alsa can be scheduled for Friday after work, giv ing patients the weekend to recover, she said. Lani Stewart of Westminster, Colo., was laid off from her pur chasing job three years after being diagnosed with breast cancer. Though the company told her she was being let go because of “necessary reductions in the work force,” Stewart, 42, is convinced the self-insured company simply didn’t want to risk future medical bills. Stewart’s lawsuit against her company is pending. Karushchkat went to the state Human Rights Commission and won a $70,000 judgment against her boss for discrimination. The cancer has reappeared in her hip bone after a second mastectomy. Despite the illness, Karushchkat believes her work would not have suffered. The Long Island woman points to the lavish flower gardens she de signed and nurtured, the veg etable garden bursting with mega-squashes, the basement lined with hand-painted oils — all done while undergoing chemotherapy. “Having a job was an impor tant motivation for getting up every morning,” said Karushchkat, who is bald because of the cancer treatments. “When I lost my job, it was like the rug was pulled out from under me.” Of those surveyed, 81 percent of survivors said their job helped them maintain emotional stability during theLr treatment. “Too many employers don't un derstand that people with cancer can function close to 100 percent,” said Richard Glovsky, a Boston lawyer who specializes in discrimi nation cases. Aggies’ next co® ie University of Jii is Four-WayIH ; 3-5, where Bet th continue lieti up. e said the tia® inuatiy men ilth. to have her in' 1 irder to have ecke said. 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