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Hydrogen Acts as a Therapeutic Antioxidant

Hydrogen Acts As A Therapeutic Antioxidant By Selectively Reducing Cytotoxic Oxygen Radicals


Date : 07/05/2007

Acute oxidative stress induced by ischemia-reperfusion or inflammation causes serious damage to tissues, and persistent oxidative stress is accepted as one of the causes of many common diseases including cancer. We show here that hydrogen (H2) has potential as an antioxidant in preventive and therapeutic applications. We induced acute oxidative stress in cultured cells by three independent methods. H2 selectively reduced the hydroxyl radical, the most cytotoxic of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and effectively protected cells; however, H2 did not react with other ROS, which possess physiological roles. We used an acute rat model in which oxidative stress damage was induced in the brain by focal ischemia and reperfusion. The inhalation of H2 gas markedly suppressed brain injury by buffering the effects of oxidative stress. Thus H2 can be used as an effective antioxidant therapy; owing to its ability to rapidly diffuse across membranes, it can reach and react with cytotoxic ROS and thus protect against oxidative damage.

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Hydrogen for Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia

Molecular hydrogen: an overview of its neurobiological effects and therapeutic potential for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia


Date : 06/06/2013

Hydrogen gas is a bioactive molecule that has a diversity of effects, including anti-apoptotic, anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative properties; these overlap with the process of neuroprogression in major psychiatric disorders. Specifically, both bipolar disorder and schizophrenia are associated with increased oxidative and inflammatory stress. Moreover, lithium which is commonly administered for treating bipolar disorder has effects on oxidative stress and apoptotic pathways, as do valproate and some atypical antipsychotics for treating schizophrenia. Molecular hydrogen has been studied pre-clinically in animal models for the treatment of some medical conditions including hypoxia and neurodegenerative disorders, and there are intriguing clinical findings in neurological disorders including Parkinson’s disease. Therefore, it is hypothesized that administration of hydrogen molecule may have potential as a novel therapy for bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and other concurrent disorders characterized by oxidative, inflammatory and apoptotic dysregulation.

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Hydrogen with Therapeutic Potential

Hydrogen: another gas with therapeutic potential


Date : 02/01/2010


Cardinal and colleagues describe the use of molecular hydrogen, the most abundant molecule in the universe, as a treatment for chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) in a rat model of kidney transplantation. They demonstrate that the addition of hydrogen to the drinking water results in a decrease in the severity of CAN and increased graft survival, and they provide evidence that the mechanism of action could be due to a reduction in reactive oxygen species.

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Hydrogen is Great for Skin

Molecular Hydrogen In Water Is Great For Skin


Date : 2013-2018

The desire to have healthy, elastic, wrinkle-free, and young looking skin dates back to primeval times. One of the ways (which is still used today) to try and accomplish this is the ancient practice of bathing in springs and mineral waters.However, unlike most conventional practices of lotions, creams, oils, powders and other cosmetics that may not help and/or even have negative side effects,3 bathing in specific waters that have reductive characteristics seems to have great therapeutic application.One study tested a mineral water with reductive characteristics (most likely due to dissolved molecular hydrogen) and a prepared water containing molecular hydrogen. The results revealed that bathing in both of these waters decreased the oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) of human skin. This is an important observation because healthy skin has reductive characteristics, and the ORP of the skin increases by oxidative damage (from sun exposure) and also by aging (as measured by lipid-peroxide levels). This relationship between redox potentials of the skin and aging has been investigated in more detail and shows that reductive waters lower the oxidation of the skin. Bathing in hydrogen water not only reduced the ORP of skin, but also improved its elasticity. Moreover, treating bleached hair with this water gave an improvement in fluency and gloss.

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Hydrogen Improves Obesity and Diabetes

Molecular Hydrogen Improves Obesity and Diabetes by Inducing Hepatic FGF21 and Stimulating Energy Metabolism in db/db Mice


Date : 03/02/2011

Recent extensive studies have revealed that molecular hydrogen (H2) has great potential for improving oxidative stress-related diseases by inhaling H2 gas, injecting saline with dissolved H2, or drinking water with dissolved H2 (H2-water); however, little is known about the dynamic movement of H2 in a body. First, we show that hepatic glycogen accumulates H2 after oral administration of H2-water, explaining why consumption of even a small amount of H2 over a short span time efficiently improves various disease models. This finding was supported by an in vitro experiment in which glycogen solution maintained H2. Next, we examined the benefit of ad libitum drinking H2-water to type 2 diabetes using db/db obesity model mice lacking the functional leptin receptor. Drinking H2-water reduced hepatic oxidative stress, and significantly alleviated fatty liver in db/db mice as well as high fat-diet-induced fatty liver in wild-type mice. Long-term drinking H2-water significantly controlled fat and body weights, despite no increase in consumption of diet and water. Moreover, drinking H2-water decreased levels of plasma glucose, insulin, and triglyceride, the effect of which on hyperglycemia was similar to diet restriction. To examine how drinking H2-water improves obesity and metabolic parameters at the molecular level, we examined gene-expression profiles, and found enhanced expression of a hepatic hormone, fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21), which functions to enhance fatty acid and glucose expenditure. Indeed, H2 stimulated energy metabolism as measured by oxygen consumption. The present results suggest the potential benefit of H2 in improving obesity, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome.

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WHO – Translation of China Government Using OxyHydrogen Treatment on Covid-19 Patients

Diagnosis and Treatment Protocol for Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia


Date : 03/03/2020


Since December 2019, multiple cases of novel coronavirus pneumonia (NCP) have been identified in Wuhan, Hubei. With the spread of the epidemic, such cases have also been found in other parts of China and other countries. As an acute respiratory infectious disease, NCP has been included in Class B infectious diseases prescribed in the Law of the People's Republic of China on Prevention and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, and managed as an infectious disease of Class A. By taking a series of preventive control and medical treatment measures, the rise of the epidemic situation in China has been contained to a certain extent, and the epidemic situation has eased in most provinces, but the incidence abroad is on the rise. With increased understanding of the clinical manifestations and pathology of the disease, and the accumulation of experience in diagnosis and treatment, in order to further strengthen the early diagnosis and early treatment of the disease, improve the cure rate, reduce the mortality rate, avoid nosocomial infection as much as possible and pay attention to the spread caused by the imported cases from overseas, we revised the Diagnosis and Treatment Protocol for Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia (Trial Version 6) to Diagnosis and Treatment Protocol for Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia (Trial Version 7).

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Molecular Hydrogen as a Potential Clinically Applicable Radioprotective Agent Especially for Cancer Patient

Molecular Hydrogen as a Potential Clinically Applicable Radioprotective Agent


Date : 27/04/2021

Although ionizing radiation (radiation) is commonly used for medical diagnosis and cancer treatment, radiation-induced damages cannot be avoided. Such damages can be classified into direct and indirect damages, caused by the direct absorption of radiation energy into DNA and by free radicals, such as hydroxyl radicals (•OH), generated in the process of water radiolysis. More specifically, radiation damage concerns not only direct damages to DNA, but also secondary damages to non-DNA targets, because low-dose radiation damage is mainly caused by these indirect effects. Molecular hydrogen (H2) has the potential to be a radioprotective agent because it can selectively scavenge •OH, a reactive oxygen species with strong oxidizing power. Animal experiments and clinical trials have reported that H2 exhibits a highly safe radioprotective effect. This paper reviews previously reported radioprotective effects of H2 and discusses the mechanisms of H2, not only as an antioxidant, but also in intracellular responses including anti-inflammation, anti-apoptosis, and the regulation of gene expression. In doing so, we demonstrate the prospects of H2 as a novel and clinically applicable radioprotective agent.

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The Edge Markets

The Edge Markets


Date : 26/11/2015

This article first appeared in Personal Wealth, The Edge Malaysia Weekly, on Nov 16 - 22, 2015.

It is in this state that hypnotherapists offer suggestions directly to the unconscious mind to effect beneficial changes in their patients or clients.

Dr Daniel Zainal Abdul Rahman, a psychiatrist uses an iceberg diagram to explain why the subconscious mind is powerful. The visible portion of the iceberg represents logical thinking, critical thinking and willpower, while the submerged portion represents beliefs, emotions, intuition, values and imagination, among others.

Contrary to popular belief, he adds, hypnotherapy does not only help psychotic patients but is widely used to cure diseases that are influenced by psychosomatic disorders. The diseases include psoriasis, eczema, stomach ulcers, high blood pressure and heart disease. Hypnotherapy is also used to help patients deal with insomnia, obesity and addictions, especially smoking.

“Hypnotherapy directly addresses the master control room. You must remember the mind and body connection is very powerful, and the mind is here [below the surface],” says Daniel.

In the 1800s, hypnotherapy was used in place of anaesthesia. After the use of ether was found to be a better solution, hypnosis was no longer a popular alternative.

But in the 1950s, the British Medical Association, the American Medical Association and the Canadian Medical Association endorsed the use of hypnosis. And even in Malaysia, at Universiti Malaya in the 1960s, they had been using hypnosis for surgeries.

In the current modern age, she says, hypnotherapy has become popular again because it is an easy therapeutic tool that uses natural states of relaxation.

Hypnotherapy myth busting

Due to the way hypnosis is presented in popular culture, hypnotherapy is surrounded by a lot of misconceptions. One of the common myths is that patients will be out of control or even have amnesia. This is in fact false as patients remain in full control even though their focus might be somewhere else.

Daniel says instead of controlling the patients, as perceived by some people, he only gives guidance and suggestions, and it is up to the patients to decide whether they want to follow them or not.

Another misconception is that once a patient goes into a hypnoidal state, they will never wake up. Menon says that there is no reason to worry about this. “I am very happy to say that no one in the history of hypnosis has ever not woken up. Everybody wakes up. The worst thing [if the hypnotherapy does not work] is you go into a nice comfortable state, you fall asleep and wake up later feeling refreshed.”

Hypnotherapy is also associated with the “placebo effect”, which refers to something that appears to be a real medical treatment but is not, and yet still has a positive impact on the patient’s well-being.

Does hypnotherapy work? How?

“The evidence that hypnotherapy is effective in the management of IBS is now so persuasive that it has recently been suggested ‘that the skills of the hypnotherapist should be made routinely available to patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders’,” reads the excerpt of the study’s conclusion.

Why is this therapy effective in managing IBS? Generally, when we have IBS, we feel bloated or tight. The way we use hypnosis is that we create images of calmness or comfort. We find that the smooth muscle in the stomach responds to that.

Daniel says hypnotherapy is also helpful in stress management to prevent mental illnesses. According to the World Health Organization, depression will be the leading cause of morbidity in the world in a matter of three to four years. “It will replace cardiovascular disease as the No 1 problem. There is a lot of depression anxiety around here. Now, hospitals invest in sickness, which is the end result of stress, because it is a multibillion-dollar business. No one talks about wellness now,” he says.

Daniel says when one suffers palpitations, numbness, shallow or rapid breathing, or there is an increase in blood pressure, or migraines, people will always go to the doctor but find out that there is nothing wrong with them. “These are symptoms. Your aim is not to treat the symptoms. When they get really anxious, they go and see all the doctors. After they have finished ‘doctor shopping’, they end up here.

“That is why you should go for hypnotherapy. When you relax, you manage your stress. Pain also comes down, so it helps with pain management and all sorts of pain.”

Recognition by Medical and Psychological Associations

Recognition by Medical and Psychological Associations


1960 The American Psychological Association endorsed hypnosis as a branch of psychology (Freud the Father of psychotherapy used hypnosis in his early work and later confirmed in his writing the value of clinical hypnosis).
1961 The American Medical Council on Mental Health recommended that medical students should receive 144 hours of training in hypnosis over a 9 to 12-month period at undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
1978 The United Kingdom, Royal Society of Medicine (RSM) formed a section for “Hypnosis and Psychosomatic Medicine”.
1986 The British Medical Association (BMA) emphasized that hypnotherapy is “part of orthodox medical treatment.”
1995 The United States’ National Institute of Health (NIH) issued an extensive report, which concluded that hypnosis is effective in alleviating chronic pain associated with cancer and other conditions, including irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and tension headaches. 2000 BMA stated to the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology that “Hypnotherapy and counselling may be considered as orthodox treatments”.
2001 The British Psychological Society commissioned a group of psychologists to publish a report on The Nature of Hypnosis, which reported that hypnosis is a proven therapeutic medium. The report stated that “hypnotic procedures may be beneficial in the management and treatment of a wide range of conditions and problems encountered in the practice of medicine, psychiatry and psychotherapy”.
2014 The American Psychological Association published a formal definition of hypnosis.