homehome Home chatchat Notifications


School kids show NASA how life-saving EpiPens become poison guns in space

NASA didn't know a space secret that these kids recently discovered during their experiment involving EpiPen.

Rupendra Brahambhatt
March 15, 2023 @ 1:12 pm

share Share

An EpiPen is a medical device that is used to automatically inject a dose of epinephrine into a person’s body to overcome the effects of life-threatening allergic reactions. Can you guess what would happen if an astronaut who’s allergic to space dust opens their EpiPen in space and takes a dose? The astronaut might feel as if he or she has been poisoned because epinephrine, the anti-allergic medicine on Earth, becomes a toxin as soon as it enters space. 

EpiPen in space
An epinephrine autoinjector with its main components highlighted. Image credits: Chemistryroxpharmacysux/Wikimedia Commons

This eye-opening information is based on an experiment performed by a team of elementary school students in Canada. What’s more surprising is that until now, even NASA had no idea about EpiPens turning toxic in space. The students who conducted the EpiPen test are part of the program for gifted learners (PGL) at Ottawa-based St. Brother André School. 

“The students were excited, and we ran with it,” their teacher, Deborah Quail-Blier, tells Dave Charbonneau of CTV News. “The results were actually quite shocking.” 

Their experiment was previously selected for Cubes in Space, a NASA project that provides school-going children the opportunity to test their innovations in outer space via a suborbital flight mission. Now in June 2023, they will meet a team of NASA scientists to discuss their groundbreaking findings.

Testing epinephrine in space

Outer space is filled with radiation and space dust that comprises various harmful chemicals, gases, and elements. These materials are released by different cosmic bodies such as stars and planets. Since our planet is shielded by different layers of the atmosphere, we and other forms of life on Earth are safe from harmful space radiation. However, astronauts face this risk and this is why many of them experience radiation sickness.

A report on space radiation from NASA mentions, beyond low Earth orbit, space radiation may place astronauts at significant risk for radiation sickness, and increased lifetime risk for cancer, central nervous system effects, and degenerative diseases. Research studies of exposure in various doses and strengths of radiation provide strong evidence that cancer and degenerative diseases are to be expected from exposures to galactic cosmic rays (GCR) or solar particle events (SPE).” 

However, it is not just the astronauts who are at risk. If you send any chemical to outer space, it could behave differently than how it behaves on Earth. This is because the chemical you send might react with other chemicals in space. The PGL students sent pure epinephrine and EpiPen epinephrine solution to space in two small NASA cubes; one on a rocket and the other on a space balloon.

When the cubes returned to Earth, they were sent to a lab at the University of Ottawa to test if the chemicals inside them went through any changes. Surprisingly, about 87 percent of the total epinephrine was still pure but 13 percent of the sample has turned into highly toxic benzoic acid derivatives. The epinephrine probably decomposed due to the conditions in outer space and therefore, the chemical was overall no longer suitable for human use. 

“In fact, no epinephrine was found in the ‘after’ (returned) EpiPen solution samples. This result raises questions about the efficacy of an EpiPen for outer space applications and these questions are now starting to be addressed by the kids in the PGL program,” said Paul Mayer, a chemistry professor at the University of Ottawa.

These results clearly indicate that we’d either have to modify EpiPens or need new medical applications to deal with allergies in outer space. The PGL students have already started working in this direction. They are developing a capsule that would protect the epinephrine solution inside an EpiPen from decomposing in space. Hopefully, these talented kids will be successful in making EpiPens work for space travelers. 

The experiment was first reported in a news release by the University of Ottawa. 

share Share

This Plastic Dissolves in Seawater and Leaves Behind Zero Microplastics

Japanese scientists unveil a material that dissolves in hours in contact with salt, leaving no trace behind.

Women Rate Women’s Looks Higher Than Even Men

Across cultures, both sexes find female faces more attractive—especially women.

AI-Based Method Restores Priceless Renaissance Art in Under 4 Hours Rather Than Months

A digital mask restores a 15th-century painting in just hours — not centuries.

Meet the Dragon Prince: The Closest Known Ancestor to T-Rex

This nimble dinosaur may have sparked the evolution of one of the deadliest predators on Earth.

Your Breathing Is Unique and Can Be Used to ID You Like a Fingerprint

Your breath can tell a lot more about you that you thought.

In the UK, robotic surgery will become the default for small surgeries

In a decade, the country expects 90% of all keyhole surgeries to include robots.

Bioengineered tooth "grows" in the gum and fuses with existing nerves to mimic the real thing

Implants have come a long way. But we can do even better.

The Real Singularity: AI Memes Are Now Funnier, On Average, Than Human Ones

People still make the funniest memes but AI is catching up fast.

Scientists Turn Timber Into SuperWood: 50% Stronger Than Steel and 90% More Environmentally Friendly

This isn’t your average timber.

A Massive Particle Blasted Through Earth and Scientists Think It Might Be The First Detection of Dark Matter

A deep-sea telescope may have just caught dark matter in action for the first time.