Authors: M.D. Kevin Fong
âââ, and David B. Weaver. “Practical Methods for Near-Term Piloted Mars Missions.” Paper presented at AIAA, SAE, ASME, and ASEE Joint Propulsion Conference and Exhibit, Monterey, CA, June 28â30, 1993, document ID: AIAA P.93-2089.
FINAL FRONTIERS
I will never forget James Hudson; he was so full of life even during what was to be his last admission. Over the weeks that I looked after him, he told me the story of his remarkable life in installments and always implored me to come back so that he could tell me more. I would like to thank his daughter Valerie Russell for giving me permission to recount as part of this book some of the stories that I had been told.
Mr. Hudson had also contributed to a television documentaryâ
Lloyd George's Warâ
for the BBC in 1998, about his experiences during the First World War. The unedited footage from that program is kept at the Imperial War Museum archives, and it is from it that the story of his fumbled hand grenade comes. Additionally, the British Dental Association holds a number of records and articles that allowed me to trace his career more accurately, from apprentice to qualified dentist and finally to hospital surgeon.
As a junior doctor, I learned something of the trade of elder-care medicine at the Hammersmith Hospital from my then registrar Dr. Geoff Cloud, who is now a consultant in stroke medicine at St. George's Hospital. When it came to writing this chapter, I visited him again to ask his advice. In that conversation and in further reading, I got the impression that the field of gerontology is changing rapidly and, as elsewhere in medicine, our expectations have changed beyond any recognition. I hadn't previously appreciated the enormous complexity of the debate surrounding the search for a general theory of aging. I was able only to scratch the surface of that here but include all of the material for further reading.
Caspari, Rachel, and Sang-Hee Lee. “Older Age Becomes Common Late in Human Evolution.”
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
101, no. 30 (July 27, 2004): 10895â900.
Chamberlain, Geoffrey. “British Maternal Mortality in the 19th and Early 20th Centuries.”
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
99, no. 11 (November 2006): 559â63.
Christensen, Kaare, et al
.
“Ageing Populations: The Challenges Ahead.”
Lancet
374, no. 9696 (October 3, 2009): 1196â1208.
Di Biase, D. and D. Shelley, “Death Notice” (James Alfred Hudson).
British Dental Journal
191, no. 5 (September 8, 2001): 282.
Gavrilov, Leonid A., and Natalia S. Gavrilova. “The Quest for a General Theory of Aging and Longevity.”
Science of Aging Knowledge Environment
no. 28 (July 16, 2003): 1â10.
Gems, David H., and Yila de la Guardia. “Alternative Perspectives on Aging in
Caenorhabditis elegans:
Reactive Oxygen Species or Hyperfunction?”
Antioxidants & Redox Signaling
19, no. 3 (July 20, 2013): 321â29.
Griffin, John P. “Changing Life Expectancy Throughout History.”
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
101, no. 12 (December 1, 2008): 577.
Hayflick, Leonard. “Entropy Explains Aging, Genetic Determinism Explains Longevity, and Undefined Terminology Explains Misunderstanding Both.”
Public Library of Science Genetics
3, no. 12 (December 14, 2007): e220.
Hudson, James Alfred. “The Dental Department at Redhill Hospital, Edgware, as a Criterion for the Hospital Services of the National Health Service.”
British Dental Journal
84 (March 1948): 100â102.
âââ. “Long in the Tooth: Witness for the Profession.”
British Dental Journal
171, no. 5 (September 7, 1991): 138â40.
“Hudson Receives Fellowship at 102.”
British Dental Journal
(News and Notes) 189, no. 10 (May 27, 2000): 589.
Kirkwood, Tom B. L. “Longevity in Perspective.” Reviews of
The Long History of Old Age,
by Pat Thane, and
The Long Tomorrow: How Evolutionary Biology Can Help Us Postpone Aging,
by Michael R. Rose.
Lancet
367, no. 9511 (February 25, 2006): 641â42.
âââ. “The Origins of Human Ageing.”
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London
, Series B,
Biological Sciences
352, no. 1363 (1997): 1765â72.
âââ. “Where Will It All End?”
Lancet
357, no. 9256 (February 24, 2001): 576.
âââ.
Time of Our Lives: The Science of Human Aging
.
London: Phoenix, 2000.
Langdon, James. “Mr. James A. Hudson.”
Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England
83 (2001 suppl.): 26â27.
Lloyd George's War
. BBC
Timewatch,
1998, unedited interviews for program, held by Imperial War Museum, London, catalog no. TV 112X.
Montagu, J.D. “Length of Life in the Ancient World: A Controlled Study.”
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
87, no. 1 (January 1994): 25â26.
Shay, Jerry W., and Woodring E. Wright. “Hayflick, His Limit, and Cellular Ageing.”
Nature Reviews: Molecular Cell Biology
1, no. 1 (October 2000): 72â76.
Walsh, John. “The Last Soldier.”
Independent
(London), November 11, 1999, p. 1.
The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. To find the corresponding locations in the text of this digital version, please use the “search” function on your e-reader. Note that not all terms may be searchable.
Â
Note: Page numbers in
italics
refer to illustrations.
ABC priority, 99â100, 105, 109, 110
abdominal surgery, 74
accelerometers, 220, 236, 248
acidity, 160, 166
Adams, Douglas,
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,
190
Admiral Duncan pub, bomb site, 115â16
adrenaline, 144
Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) protocol, 100, 105, 109, 111, 113
age, chronological vs. physiological, 250â51
aging, 241â52
and breathing, 247
and disease, 249, 252
and entropy, 248â49, 252
life expectancy, 245, 250
and muscles, 246â48
air:
fresh, 241
and lungs, 154, 157, 169
ocean of, 168
oxygen in, 170, 183â84
pressurized, 169
Airbus, 215
aircraft fuel, burning temperature of, 42
airliners, cruising altitude of, 183
airlock, 185
air pressure, 168â69, 170â71
air safety, 256
airway, in ABC priority, 99â100
Aldrin, Buzz, 212, 254
algae, 227
altitude:
Armstrong line at, 184â86
high, 182
medical problems of, 182â86
alveoli, 77, 157, 169, 184
Amundsen, Roald, 9, 28, 72, 253â54
anaerobic respiration, 166
anesthesia, 144, 243
and cardiac surgery, 87
and intensive-care medicine, 129
and polio, 130â35
unconsciousness of, 128â29, 134
aneurysm, 23
angiosomes, 51
Antarctica, 9, 12â14, 15, 27â28
anterior horn, 125
antibiotics, 85, 87, 88
antiemetic medications, 221
Apollo space program, 213, 254
Archimedes principle, 154
Aristotle, 73
Armstrong, Harry George, 185
Armstrong, Neil, 212, 213, 252â53, 254
Armstrong line, 184â86
arterial gas embolism, 169â70
arthritis, 135
Artificial Gravity Pilot Project, 233â36
astronauts, 190, 221â24
and absence of gravity, 221, 229â31
disorientation of, 223
on the Moon, 253
postflight orthostatic intolerance, 223
reacclimatizing, 223â24
and reentry, 204â5
and RTLS abort, 193â94
and Soyeon, 197â203, 205â8
and weightlessness,
210
, 214, 216, 221, 232
Atlantis,
186â90, 208
atmospheres, 168
auto accidents:
fatal injuries in, 246
first, 244â45
axons, 125
bacterial endocarditis, 80â81, 85
BÃ¥genholm, Anna, 15â23, 26, 29, 257
Bailey, Charles, 87, 88, 90â92, 256
balance, 9
barotrauma, 170
Battle of Britain, 38â41, 256
Battle of the Bulge, 82
Billroth, Christian Albert Theodor, 74
biomolecules, 248, 249
Bjørneboe, Mogens, 129â30
Blegdam Hospital, Copenhagen, 129, 132â33
blisters, 37
blood:
air in contact with, 157
bleeding to death, 112â13
and bypass machine, 20â21, 26
carbon dioxide in, 132, 160, 167
circulation to the heart, 76â77
hemoglobin in, 141, 184
hemorrhaging, 110, 113
loss of, 83, 112
oxygen in, 142, 163
and skin, 49
supply to the face, 51â52, 60, 61, 62
transfusions, 83, 87â88
blood pressure, measuring, 164â65
blood vessels, constricting underwater, 164
body, repair and regeneration of, 249
bombing incident, 102â5, 109â11, 115
Bonaparte, Napoléon, 95
bones:
and aging, 248
and force of gravity, 218
Bower, Albert, 132
Bowers, Henry, 27
brain:
and aging, 248
autopilot of, 128
damage to, 53
human, 14
neurons in, 124â26
visual cortex in, 210
brain-stem death, 53â54
breath-hold diving, 163â65, 167
breathing, 155â58
in ABC priority, 99
act of, 156â57, 159â61
and aging, 247
at altitude, 184
in diving underwater, 170
and exercise, 174â75, 176
holding your breath, 155, 160, 163
as human drive, 161, 167
and lungs, 156, 161
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, 55, 61â64
British Antarctic Survey, 28
Brock, Russell, 87
bronchial tree, 156â57
Brudon, Pascale, 137â38
buoyancy, 154â55
and lungs, 157
negative, 155, 158
burns:
and blisters, 37
deaths from, 37, 38
disfigurement from, 57
electrical, 57
extent of affected area, 38, 49
inflammatory response provoked by, 37â38
pain from, 42
and plastic surgery, 44â48
and skin,
see
skin
and survival, 38
bypass circuits:
and hypothermia, 20â21, 24
and risk, 252â53
and survival, 257
Calment, Jeanne, 250, 251
cancer, 135, 257
Cape Canaveral, 187, 191â92
carbon dioxide:
in blood, 132, 160, 167
expulsion from lungs, 132, 133
scrubbing out, 226
cardiac arrest:
at altitude, 185
and blood loss, 83, 112
and downtime, 18
in space, 194â95
cardiac surgery, 74, 79, 84, 87â92, 157
cardiovascular system, and absence of gravity, 222
carotid artery, 51
cell, derivation of word, 124â25
Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 138
central nervous system, 126
centrifuge, 232, 234
Chain, Ernst Boris, 85
Challenger,
186, 190, 205
Chen, Johnny, 136, 138â39
Cherry-Garrard, Apsley, 27
China, atypical pneumonia in, 136â40
chronic illness, 135
Churchill, Edward Delos, 80
circulation:
in ABC priority, 99, 110
at altitude, 185
remapping, 50
shutting down underwater, 166
Cold War, 254
Collins, Michael, 254
Columbia,
186, 190, 205
consciousness, 123, 166
consumption, 135
Copeland, David, 116
Copenhagen, polio virus in, 127, 129â35, 148, 256
coronavirus, 147
Craig, Albert B., 163â64
crash, and cardiac arrest, 18
CT (computerized tomography) scans, 60
Cutler, Elliott Carr, 80
cytoplasm, 124
D-Day, 82
DDT, 27
death:
avoidance of, 14
bleeding to, 112â13
from hypothermia, 11, 12, 14, 26
life after, 52
newly defined, 53
simplicity as synonymous with, 11
decompression illness, 176
dermis, 35
Derosier, Jean-Paul, 139
Dezhbod, Esmail, 23â25
diaphragm, 156
disability, in trauma priority, 100
Discovery,
27, 186, 251
dive reflex, 167
diving:
ascending slowly after a dive, 171
breath-hold, 163â65, 167
and breathing, 170
free diving, 163â64, 166â67
mammalian reflex, 164
narcotic effects (“narcs”), 170, 171
oxygen in, 166
at Qalito, 171â77
scuba,
152
, 167â68
skin diving, 162â63
diving tables, 171
Domagk, Gerhard, 85
downtime, and cardiac arrest, 18
drowning, 158, 166
Dykes, Andrea, 115â16
Dykes, Julian, 115
Eagle,
253
Earth:
circumnavigation of, 255
gravitational load on, 232
orbit of, 225
orbiting, 212â13
water covering, 177â78
Edrich, Tom, 59â60, 62â63
elder care, 241â44
life expectancy, 245, 250
risk-benefit equation in, 243, 252â53
electrical burns, 57
electrical neutrality, 10
Elefteriades, John, 24â25
Ellis, Lawrence Brewster, 86
embolisms, 169â70
encephalitis, 132
Endeavour,
186
endocarditis, bacterial, 80â81, 85
energy, 10
absence of, 12
Enterprise,
180
, 195
entropy, 248â49, 252
epidermis, 34â35
burns of, 36
equipoise, 9
erector spinae, 217
European Space Agency, 215
evolution, 115, 128, 207, 218
exercise, and breathing, 174â75, 176
exploration, 257
exposure, in trauma priority, 100
eyeballs, 219â20
face:
blood supply to, 51â52, 60, 61, 62
donation of, 54, 62
full transplants of, 52, 54, 55, 58â64, 257
roles of, 57â58
sculpting of features, 64, 257
Falkenberg, Marie, 15â16, 17
fight-or-flight response, 175
“First, do no harm” (
primum non nocere
), 78
Fleming, Alexander, 85
flight, dynamic phases of, 205
Florey, Howard, 85
flu infections, 146
Fong, Ah Yoong, 121, 123
fovea, 219â20
free diving, 163â64, 166â67
free flap, 50, 58
French Hospital, Hanoi, 137â38
Gagarin, Yuri, 208, 211, 254
gasp, involuntary, 161, 166
Geckeler, George, 88
genes, and aging, 252
genetic code, 56
Gilbert, Mads, 20
Gillies, Harold, 44, 45
glaciology, 27
Gleave, Tom, 39â41, 42â45, 47
Glenn, John, 251
global warming, evidence of, 28
golden hour, concept of, 96
Golgi apparatus, 124
Gomersall, Charles, 142â46
gravity, 216â18
absence of, 221â22, 229â31
artificial, 230â32, 233â36
one-G, 231
and orbit, 190
prescribing, 232
and space training, 216
and space travel, 221â22
zero-G, 214
Grey Turner, George, 74â76, 77â79, 80, 82, 84
Guinea Pig Club, 47â48, 65
gunshot wounds, 68â71
to the heart, 74â76, 77â78
Hakka people, 121
Harken, Dwight E., 79â84, 86â87, 88â92, 256
Hawley, Paul R., 79, 81
healing:
and immune system, 114
new cell growth in, 36â37
heart:
and aging, 247
anatomical complexity of, 76
bacterial endocarditis in, 80â81
beating, 76
blood circulation of, 76â77
bypass operations, 20â21, 24, 252â53, 257
cardiac arrest, 112â13
closed-heart surgery, 90, 256
contraction of, 222
gunshot wound to, 74â76, 77â78
and hemorrhage, 113
intraoperative resuscitation of, 82â83
and lack of gravity, 222
location of, 71â72
missiles lodged in, 74, 75â76, 77â78, 82, 84
mitral valve in, 85â86
moving, 84
repair of, 85
safe routes through, 83â84
slowing underwater, 164, 166
heart-lung bypass machine, 20â21, 24, 252
and hypothermia, 20â21, 24
and risk, 252â53
and survival, 257
heart transplants, 53, 61
helicopter crash training, 153â54
Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS), 104
helicopter evacuation, 96, 257
Helicopter Underwater Escape Training (HUET), 154, 158â59
hemoglobin, 141, 184
hemorrhage, 110, 113
Heroic Age of exploration, 28
histology, 33â34, 50
Hudson, James, 250â52
birth of, 245
in the Great War, 239â40, 245â46
and maxillofacial surgery, 246
as over a century old, 244, 245â48, 250
hypercalcemia, 221
hyperventilation, 158, 183
hypothermia:
and BÃ¥genholm, 17, 18â23
and circulatory arrest, 24â25
death from, 11, 12, 14, 26
and Dezhbod, 23â25
overcoming, 15
and resuscitation, 18â23
and Scott, 9, 12â14, 26
Ibsen, Bjørn, 130â34, 135, 143, 256
immune system:
and aging, 240
attacking the body's own tissues, 85â86
fighting disease, 165
and infections, 56, 141
inflammation in, 143
and multiorgan failure, 143
suppression of, 56
and transplants, 55â56
and trauma, 114â15
infantile paralysis, 127;
see also
poliomyelitis
infection, protection against, 126
inflammatory response, 37â38
inner ear, 218â20, 231, 233, 236, 248
innovation:
and survival, 111, 114â15
vs. experimentation, 92
intensive-care unit:
and anesthetics, 129
eighteen-year-old patient in, 119â20, 149â50
improvements in, 143â44
and polio epidemic, 130â31, 135, 148, 256
roles of, 120â21, 135, 146, 147â48, 256â57
and SARS, 148
and survival, 257
and trauma, 115
International Space Station (ISS), 187, 195, 196, 200â202
ion-channel control, 42
ions, 10â11
iron lungs, 131, 132â33, 256
Janis, Jeff, 57
Japanese amas, diving, 162
Joosten, Kent, 231
KC-135 weightless training aircraft,
210
Kennedy, John F., 254
Kennedy Space Center, 187, 191â92
keratin, 34
kidney dialysis, 144