As Dust 514 gets closer and, with any luck,
Templar One tells us the (new) current state of play with cloning, we might get a better idea of the types of things we're working with.
For now I'd add to the list:
-- Either auto-immune disorders as the customer's immune system attacks the biomass (which might not even be human), or seriously damped immune responses as everything's turned off to avoid that (meaning you'd be susceptible to just about anything and the air in station might indeed be a problem).
-- Lung problems from liquid-breathing. Yes,
mice can breath in perfluorocarbon, but from what I can see so far they've died afterwards from lung trauma. Assume FutureScience improves this but there are still problems at the extremes. Apparently there's work to develop nanites that will "eat" the perfluorocarbon that clings to you when you de-pod, but no news yet on what they'll do with the mass or where
they'll go, which could be rather important on the exchange surfaces of your lungs.
-- I'm not sure if there'd be huge emotional swings from the chemical changes of changing bodies, or if all bodies would be heavily monitored and fed a blend of psychoactive drugs that was considered appropriate (
Equilibrium). I do imagine there are different cultural protocols about whether a pilot has the right not to take their meds.
If osteoplastic is used for all bones, and not just the bones that are required for a body to look like the customer profile:
-- Ligament attachment problems where the biomass tears away from the osteoplastic.
-- Various blood disorders possibly requiring blood supplementation. Is there something in the "clone" that does the jobs of bone marrow, especially producing red blood cells and platelets? Which immune regime does that belong to: the customer's? Sync it with whatever acts as a spleen so old cells are cleaned away but not too quickly. Alternatively, use something artificial and have the pilot go in for a blood change periodically.
Also:
-- Why do we still use bodies at all? Wouldn't it be more efficient to have some sort of carrier for the brain matrix that doesn't have all these messy biological problems?
(Argh! I hate this idea, despite thinking it makes a lot of sense and also having fond memories of
The Ship Who Sang.)