Occupational Lunar Adaptation Vestibular Syndrome
Earth designation: Occupational Vestibular Dysfunction
Occupational presentation of Vestibular Dysfunction in lunar residents. Disruption of the vestibular system's ability to accurately interpret spatial orientation in the novel gravitational environment. The inner ear evolved for Earth's 1g gravity; in lunar 1/6g, the otolith organs (which detect linear acceleration and gravity) are chronically understimulated, leading to...
Lunar Risk Factors
Arrival in lunar gravity (acute adaptation). Return from Earth (re-adaptation). Extended EVA in microgravity above lunar surface. Sleep deprivation exacerbating vestibular compensation. Age >50 (reduced vestibular plasticity).
Symptoms
Vertigo, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, spatial disorientation, difficulty with head movements.
Lunar Presentation
Most severe in first 3-5 days of lunar arrival. Bounding locomotion is particularly challenging — head movements during jumping cause spatial confusion. Night-time orientation in 1/6g requires habituation. Some residents develop "lunar vertigo" — chronic mild disorientation.
Diagnosis
Clinical: Dix-Hallpike maneuver (modified for lunar gravity). Romberg test in lunar gravity conditions. VEMP testing if available. Otolith function assessment.
Treatment
Vestibular rehabilitation exercises, anti-emetics for acute phase, habituation.
Lunar Medical Bay Protocol
Acute phase: meclizine (antihistamine), promethazine if severe. Activity modification in first 48 hours. Structured vestibular rehabilitation program specific to lunar gravity (habituation exercises in 1/6g). Restrict EVA in first 10 days unless essential. Progressive exposure to challenging head movements. Most residents adapt within 2-3 weeks.
Evacuation Criteria
Severe prolonged vertigo >2 weeks without improvement. CNS lesion causing secondary vestibular dysfunction (stroke, tumor). Vestibular dysfunction preventing critical duty performance.
Prevention
Pre-mission vestibular training, gradual acclimatization protocol, vestibular exercises in first week.