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  • (#1) A Burning Rash All Over His Skin

    Kelly discovered a strange rash:

    'My skin is burning, too,' I tell her. Amiko frantically examines me. I have a strange rash all over my back, the backs of my legs, the back of my head and neck – everywhere I was in contact with the bed.

    I can feel her cool hands moving over my inflamed skin. 'It looks like an allergic rash,' she says. 'Like hives.'

  • (#2) An Extremely High Risk Of Cancer

    Kelly's cancer risk was significantly increased by the time he spent in space. According to The Globe and Mail:

    During his months in space, Kelly had more than 30 times the exposure to radiation of a person on Earth – equivalent to about 10 chest X-rays a day.

  • (#3) Relentless High Fever

    On page six of Endurance, Kelly speaks about feeling unwell:

    'Amiko,'" I finally manage to say. She is alarmed by the sound of my voice.

    'What is it?' Her hand is on my arm, then on my forehead.

    Her skin feels chilled, but it's just that I'm so hot. 'I don't feel good,' I say.

  • (#4) A Rush Of Blood To The Legs

    Kelly details the start of the leg episode with his challenges just trying to move:

    I struggle to get up. Find the edge of the bed. Feet down. Sit up. Stand up. At every stage I feel like I'm fighting through quicksand. When I'm finally vertical, the pain in my legs is awful, and on top of that pain I feel a sensation that's even more alarming: it feels as though all the blood in my body is rushing to my legs, like the sensation of the blood rushing to your head when you do a handstand, but in reverse.

  • (#5) Waves Of Nausea

    Kelly's fear is palpable on page six:

    I'm seriously nauseated now, feverish, and my pain has gotten worse. This isn't like how I felt after my last mission. This is much, much worse.

  • (#6) Muscles And Joints Feeling Prematurely Aged

    Kelly wrote about his experience in the Sydney Morning Herald:

    It's March 2016, and I've been back on Earth, after a year in space, for precisely 48 hours. I push back from the table and struggle to stand up, feeling like a very old man getting out of a recliner.

  • (#7) An Overwhelming Nausea From Gravity

    Kelly contended with overwhelming nausea, also discussed on page six:

    I'm also nauseated, though I haven't thrown up. I strip off my clothes and get into bed, relishing the feeling of sheets, the light pressure of the blanket over me, the fluff of the pillow under my head.

  • (#8) Problems With Vision

    Even on his earlier, shorter missions, Kelly had experienced a small taste of what he would later experience more extensively after his longer trip in space. After an entire year in space, the previous health problems only magnified

    On my previous flight to the space station, a mission of 159 days, I lost bone mass, my muscles atrophied, and my blood redistributed itself in my body, which strained and shrank the walls of my heart. More troubling, I experienced problems with my vision, as many other astronauts had.

  • (#9) A Disconnect With Walking

    On page six of Endurance, Kelly talks about his disconnect with walking:

    I start the journey to my bedroom: about 20 steps from the chair to the bed. On the third step, the floor seems to lurch under me, and I stumble into a planter. Of course, it isn't the floor – it's my vestibular system trying to read just to Earth's gravity. I'm getting used to walking again.

  • (#10) Legs Like "Alien Stumps" And Ankles Swollen To A Bursting Point

    Kelly writes on page seven of Endurance

    I can feel the tissue in my legs swelling. I shuffle my way to the bathroom, moving my weight from one foot to the other with deliberate effort. Left. Right. Left. Right. I make it to the bathroom, flip on the light, and look down at my legs. They are swollen and alien stumps, not legs at all. 'Oh sh*t,' I say. 'Amiko, come look at this.' She kneels down and squeezes one ankle, and it squishes like a water balloon. She looks up at me with worried eyes. 'I can't even feel your ankle bones,' she says.

  • (#11) An Altered Sense Of Gravity

    On page 79 of Endurance, Kelly talks about his skewed sense of gravity:

    I’m often still disoriented about how my body is positioned. I’ll wake up convinced that I’m upside down, because in the dark and without gravity, my inner ear just takes a random guess on the position of my body in the small space.

    When I turn on a light, I have a sort of visual illusion that the room is rotating rapidly as it reorients itself around me, though I know it’s actually my brain readjusting in response to new sensory input.

  • (#12) Pain All Over The Body

    Kelly continues discussing the pain on page six:

    Every part of my body hurts. All my joints and all of my muscles are protesting the crushing pressure of gravity.

  • (#13) An Inability To Regain Full Consciousness

    Kelly dishes on his deep sleep on page six:

    I've only been asleep for a couple of hours but I feel delirious. It's a struggle to come to consciousness enough to move, to tell her [Amiko] how awful I feel.

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About This Tool

Scientists have been studying the effects of space travel on the human body. Researchers from multiple institutions in the United States conducted comparative studies on American astronaut Scott Kelly who after 340 days on the International Space Station and his twin brother Mark Kelly. They collected and analyzed the health conditions of the twins.

The study found that Scott Kelly's carotid arteries, retina, and gut microbes had changed. Most of these changes were restored within 6 months after returning to earth, but a small part is long-term potential damage. The random tool lists 13 things that happened after Scott Kelly got back from space.

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