Novel therapy for COVID-19 does intravenous ozonated-saline affect blood and tissue oxygenation?
Author(s) -
JA Thorp,
SA Hollonbeck,
DD Viglione,
PC Green,
JR Hodge,
J. Tamburro,
T.N. Tran,
DS Glassman
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of gynecological research and obstetrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2581-5288
DOI - 10.17352/jgro.000085
Subject(s) - oxygenation , medicine , saline , ozone therapy , hypoxia (environmental) , covid-19 , anesthesia , intensive care medicine , blood oxygenation , oxygen , chemistry , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , disease , alternative medicine , organic chemistry , radiology , functional magnetic resonance imaging
Adjunctive ozone therapy for COVID-19 is being used successfully in China, Spain, Italy, and South America. One proposed mechanism is by improving blood / tissue oxygenation thus averting multiorgan system failure due to hypoxia. The purpose of this study was to determine if ozonated-saline administered intravenously affects the oxygenation and duration of time spent in a hypoxia chamber.
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