One Giant Leap for Womankind: First Menstrual Cups Tested in Space Flight Conditions
Ligia F. Coelho, Catarina Miranda, Joao Canas, Miguel Morgado, Diogo Nunes, Andre F. Henriques, and Adam B. Langeveld

TL;DR
This paper reports the first testing of menstrual cups in spaceflight conditions, demonstrating their durability and potential as sustainable menstrual management tools for long-duration space missions.
Contribution
It introduces the AstroCup mission, the first to evaluate menstrual cups in space, highlighting their resilience and suitability for future lunar and Martian missions.
Findings
Menstrual cups maintain integrity under spaceflight conditions.
They perform effectively with simulated human blood.
The study supports menstrual cups as sustainable options for space missions.
Abstract
In the early days of space exploration, when Sally Ride was offered 100 tampons for a week-long mission, menstrual medical devices first began to be used in space conditions. Since then, hormonal menstrual suppression has become the preferred method for managing menstruation in space, offering significant advantages. However, this is not an option for astronauts who choose to menstruate. The lack of sustainable menstrual technologies will pose challenges for long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars, where astronauts may spend years in space. The AstroCup mission represents the first effort to test menstrual cups in spaceflight, evaluating their durability and functionality. Through material integrity tests and functional assessments using a rheological analogue of human blood, we demonstrate the resilience of menstrual cups and discuss their implications for sustainable menstrual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpaceflight effects on biology
