Iwama Hiroshi, Ohmizo Hiroshi, Furuta Setsuo, Ohmori Satoshi, Watanabe Kazuhiro, Kaneko Toshikazu, Tsutsumi Kazuo
Department of Anesthesiology, Central Aizu General Hospital, Aizuwakamatsu, Japan.
Crit Care Med. 2002 Jun;30(6):1246-9. doi: 10.1097/00003246-200206000-00014.
Low concentrations of superoxide (O(2)(-)) constitute a portion of atmosphere negative ions in the form of O(2)-(H(2)O)(n), which has been reported to have a stimulatory effect on superoxide dismutase activity. If superoxide dismutase is activated by inspired negative ions containing O(2)(-), aerobic metabolism could be improved. To test this hypothesis, we examined blood lactate concentrations in postoperative patients with or without inhalation of air from a home humidifier that generates O(2)-(H(2)O)(n).
Prospective, randomized, controlled trial.
Neurosurgical intensive care unit of a general hospital.
Twenty postneurosurgical patients with arterial blood lactate concentrations >1.5 mmol/L were studied and were divided randomly into two groups.
One group received 40 L/min 40% oxygen flow from a home humidifier as an oxygen therapy for 4 hrs, followed by almost the same flow from a jet nebulizer, which generates positive ions, for 4 hrs. The other group received the reverse combination.
During the 8-hr study, arterial blood lactate concentrations were measured every hour. There was a significant difference in the time course of blood lactate concentrations between the groups. In the group in which negative ions were first initiated for 4 hrs and positive ions thereafter, the lactate concentration decreased slightly at 3, 4, and 5 hrs and returned to the baseline concentration thereafter. In the group with the reverse combination, the lactate concentration did not change during the first 4 hrs but decreased thereafter after inhalation of negative ions.
Inspired O(2)(-) attenuates blood lactate concentrations. This may be attributed, in part, to the systemic stimulatory effect on superoxide dismutase activity, which accelerates oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria, thus attenuating lactate generation.