Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature review

ABSTRACT: Background. The medical relevance of therapeutic gases can range from use in burns and stroke victims to hypoxia therapy in children. However, medical gases such as oxygen, hydrogen, helium and xenon have recently come under increased exploration for their potential therapeutic use on va...

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Main Authors: MUNTEANU Constantin, DOGARU Gabriela, ROTARIU Mariana1, ONOSE Gelu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Romanian Association of Balneology, Editura Balneara 2021-06-01
Series:Balneo and PRM Research Journal
Subjects:
h2s
Online Access:http://bioclima.ro/Balneo430.pdf
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record_format Article
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MUNTEANU Constantin
DOGARU Gabriela
ROTARIU Mariana1
ONOSE Gelu
spellingShingle MUNTEANU Constantin
DOGARU Gabriela
ROTARIU Mariana1
ONOSE Gelu
Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature review
Balneo and PRM Research Journal
therapeutic gas
oxygen therapy
carbon dioxide
co2 therapy
carbon monoxide
mofette
hydrogen sulfide
h2s
helium
xenon
ozone therapy
radon
hydrogen therapy
nitric oxide
heliox
rehabilitation
author_facet MUNTEANU Constantin
DOGARU Gabriela
ROTARIU Mariana1
ONOSE Gelu
author_sort MUNTEANU Constantin
title Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature review
title_short Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature review
title_full Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature review
title_fullStr Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature review
title_full_unstemmed Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature review
title_sort therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - synthetic literature review
publisher Romanian Association of Balneology, Editura Balneara
series Balneo and PRM Research Journal
issn 2734-8458
2734-8458
publishDate 2021-06-01
description ABSTRACT: Background. The medical relevance of therapeutic gases can range from use in burns and stroke victims to hypoxia therapy in children. However, medical gases such as oxygen, hydrogen, helium and xenon have recently come under increased exploration for their potential therapeutic use on various brain disease states, including traumatic brain injuries, hypoxia-ischemia and, cerebral hemorrhages. Objective. This synthetic review aims to rigorously select related articles and identify within their content the main possible uses of therapeutic gases and physiological mechanisms. The objective of this article is to present the various therapeutic mechanisms that have been proposed in the current literature and the medical relevance of various therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy or medical rehabilitation. Methods. To elaborate our synthesis review, we have searched for relevant open access articles in 6 international databases: Cochrane, Elsevier, NCBI/PubMed, NCBI/PMC, PEDro, and ISI Web of Knowledge/Science, published from January 2011 until December 2020. The contextually quested keywords combinations/ syntaxes used specified on this page. The eligible articles were analyzed in detail regarding pathologies addressed by therapeutic gases. All articles with any design (reviews, randomized controlled trials, non-randomized controlled trials, case-control studies, cross-sectional studies), if eligible according to the above-mentioned selection methodology, containing in the title or abstract the above-mentioned combinations, were included in the analysis. Articles were excluded in the second phase if they did not reach the relevance criterion. Results. Our search identified, first, 225 articles. After eliminating the duplicates, remained 180 articles. In the second phase, we applied a relevance criterion. Although our team - including the authors of this paper – have quite long and consistent expertise in achieving systematic literature reviews, the marked heterogeneity of both the item composing the subject we have approached and inherently the wase of presentations in the respective quite vast and diverse domain of medical gases, prevented us to fulfil, at least regarding this initial work, a systematic literature review. Instead, we succeeded to make a hopefully interesting and valuable narrative synthetic-related literature review. At the end of the second phase, 63 articles passed the relevance criterion and were included in this synthetic review. Conclusions. Therapeutic gases are not fully understood and used adequately for sanogenic or medical purposes. More research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms and importance of therapeutic gases. The link between balneotherapy and medical rehabilitation regarding the usage of therapeutical gases emphasises the unity for this medical speciality.
topic therapeutic gas
oxygen therapy
carbon dioxide
co2 therapy
carbon monoxide
mofette
hydrogen sulfide
h2s
helium
xenon
ozone therapy
radon
hydrogen therapy
nitric oxide
heliox
rehabilitation
url http://bioclima.ro/Balneo430.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT munteanuconstantin therapeuticgasesusedinbalneotherapyandrehabilitationmedicinescientificrelevanceinthelasttenyears20112020syntheticliteraturereview
AT dogarugabriela therapeuticgasesusedinbalneotherapyandrehabilitationmedicinescientificrelevanceinthelasttenyears20112020syntheticliteraturereview
AT rotariumariana1 therapeuticgasesusedinbalneotherapyandrehabilitationmedicinescientificrelevanceinthelasttenyears20112020syntheticliteraturereview
AT onosegelu therapeuticgasesusedinbalneotherapyandrehabilitationmedicinescientificrelevanceinthelasttenyears20112020syntheticliteraturereview
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spelling doaj-d629f4ec45864ef0b99720f49b97ac3e2021-05-30T17:08:29ZengRomanian Association of Balneology, Editura BalnearaBalneo and PRM Research Journal2734-84582734-84582021-06-0112211112210.12680/balneo.2021.430Therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy and rehabilitation medicine - scientific relevance in the last ten years (2011 – 2020) - Synthetic literature reviewMUNTEANU Constantin0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1084-7710DOGARU Gabriela1ROTARIU Mariana12ONOSE Gelu31. Romanian Association of Balneology, Bucharest, Romania 2. Teaching Emergency Hospital ”Bagdasar-Arseni”, Bucharest, Romania 3. Faculty of Medical Bioengineering, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Grigore T. Popa”, Iași, Romania5. Faculty of Medicine, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Iuliu Hațieganu”, Cluj-Napoca, Romania 6. Clinical Rehabilitation Hospital Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaFaculty of Medical Bioengineering, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Grigore T. Popa”, Iași, RomaniaFaculty of Medicine, Department of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Medicine and Pharmacy ”Carol Davila”, Bucharest, ABSTRACT: Background. The medical relevance of therapeutic gases can range from use in burns and stroke victims to hypoxia therapy in children. However, medical gases such as oxygen, hydrogen, helium and xenon have recently come under increased exploration for their potential therapeutic use on various brain disease states, including traumatic brain injuries, hypoxia-ischemia and, cerebral hemorrhages. Objective. This synthetic review aims to rigorously select related articles and identify within their content the main possible uses of therapeutic gases and physiological mechanisms. The objective of this article is to present the various therapeutic mechanisms that have been proposed in the current literature and the medical relevance of various therapeutic gases used in balneotherapy or medical rehabilitation. Methods. To elaborate our synthesis review, we have searched for relevant open access articles in 6 international databases: Cochrane, Elsevier, NCBI/PubMed, NCBI/PMC, PEDro, and ISI Web of Knowledge/Science, published from January 2011 until December 2020. The contextually quested keywords combinations/ syntaxes used specified on this page. The eligible articles were analyzed in detail regarding pathologies addressed by therapeutic gases. All articles with any design (reviews, randomized controlled trials, non-randomized controlled trials, case-control studies, cross-sectional studies), if eligible according to the above-mentioned selection methodology, containing in the title or abstract the above-mentioned combinations, were included in the analysis. Articles were excluded in the second phase if they did not reach the relevance criterion. Results. Our search identified, first, 225 articles. After eliminating the duplicates, remained 180 articles. In the second phase, we applied a relevance criterion. Although our team - including the authors of this paper – have quite long and consistent expertise in achieving systematic literature reviews, the marked heterogeneity of both the item composing the subject we have approached and inherently the wase of presentations in the respective quite vast and diverse domain of medical gases, prevented us to fulfil, at least regarding this initial work, a systematic literature review. Instead, we succeeded to make a hopefully interesting and valuable narrative synthetic-related literature review. At the end of the second phase, 63 articles passed the relevance criterion and were included in this synthetic review. Conclusions. Therapeutic gases are not fully understood and used adequately for sanogenic or medical purposes. More research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms and importance of therapeutic gases. The link between balneotherapy and medical rehabilitation regarding the usage of therapeutical gases emphasises the unity for this medical speciality.http://bioclima.ro/Balneo430.pdftherapeutic gasoxygen therapycarbon dioxideco2 therapycarbon monoxidemofettehydrogen sulfideh2sheliumxenonozone therapyradonhydrogen therapynitric oxidehelioxrehabilitation