Nebulizers are used to aerate water soluble medicines
dissolved in water into a fine mist tolerable for inhalation
in a constant & steady concentration until the medicine
has been completely delivered.
"At the Ohio State University Medical Center, pharmacists,
respiratory therapists, and pulmonologists endorse what
they call off-label nebulization. Off-label nebulization
is a rapidly growing area of patient care and in time new
research and practical experience will bring us much more
information on how magnesium and other agents like sodium
bicarbonate, iodine, peroxide and glutathione can be administered
directly into the lungs for many difficult-to-treat conditions.
Even DMSO has been used in veterinarian medicine and naturopaths
have used Tea Tree Oil from Australia, which is used topically
as fungicide antiseptic and germicide. Eucalyptus oil has
also been used forever because it is a known bronchial-dilator." Source
A nebulizer is a machine that turns liquid
medicine into a mist so that it can be inhaled,
according to the American Thoracic Society. Often
used for the treatment of asthma, the mist is easily
inhaled and acts more quickly than other
methods of medication delivery. |
Nebulizers changes liquid (medicine) into
fine droplets (in aerosol or mist form) that are inhaled
through a mouthpiece or mask. Nebulizers can be used
to deliver bronchodilator (airway-opening) medicines
such as albuterol (Ventolin, Proventil or Airet) or ipratropium
bromide (Atrovent). ( Stop reading if you ever used any
of those. ) Nebulizers are also an excellent delivery
method for introducing Colloidal Silver directly into
the nose and lungs. A nebulizer may be used instead of
a spray bottle or nasal inhaler.
Nebulizers use oxygen, compressed air or ultrasonic
power to break up solutions and suspensions into small
aerosol droplets that can be directly inhaled from the
mouthpiece of the device. The definition of an aerosol
is a "mixture of gas and liquid particles," and
the best example of a naturally-occurring aerosol is
mist, formed when small vaporized water particles mixed
with hot ambient air are cooled down and condense into
a fine cloud of visible airborne water droplets.
So after I was suffering for 10 days with
a cold myself that wouldn't go away I thought
I'd try taking buffered Vitamin C (sodium ascorbate)
via a nebulizer.
It did relieve congestion considerably,
and if I slept right after then it seemed to
have a longer lasting effect. |
Nebulisers
are not some hippy, new age alterenative tool
"Sometimes very sick people or even animals
with a lung ailment do better when taking drugs by nebulization
as opposed to orally, because then the embattled system
doesn’t need to go through breaking down the medications
in the stomach and then delivering them to the lungs through
the blood stream. With nebulization medicines get sprayed
directly onto the lung tissues where they can most easily
be absorbed locally by the lung and brachial cells."
Medicines
given using a nebulizer:
• Antibiotics: These medicines fight lung infections caused by bacteria.
They may before diseases such as cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis. These medicines
improve lung function and decrease symptoms.
"Ok, this may seem like a dumb idea
for a post, but my little girly is sick and is
having breathing
trouble and I've discovered via the net a way I can
help her without giving her steroids or chemicals,My
doc said that I should put saline in a nebulizer
and let her breathe in the salt water solution...
and
they usually sell saline in pharmacies for this purpose
among others..."
Homemade Saline Solution Recipe
Ingredients:
1 cup water (ideally filtered)
1 tsp salt
Instructions:
1. Bring water to a boil. Boil for 10 minutes to get
rid of any impurities.
2. Mix salt into the water
and stir until dissolved.
3. Let the saline mixture
cool. more
"Nichole Langham Where are you located? I'm in Ohio
and this year the pollens or something has caused it
to be brutal on
my breathing! Usually I'm dealing with difficulty breathing
for a week each year at this time since we moved here
but this year it's lasted 3 weeks, I've been handling
it with homeopathics but the nebulizer helps so much
I've been avoiding it cause "the doc refused to write
a script for just the saline solution". I refuse
to put toxic junk in my body so I've been holding out
and decided to pop online today to see if I can find
a good source for this info. Having hubs boil the water
now to make it so I can use the nebulizer." Source |
• Bronchodilators:
These medicines stop body reflexes that make your airways
smaller, to help you to breathe easier. Their effects may
last for 4 to 6 hours (short acting) or for 12 hours (long
acting). You may feel that your heart is
beating faster or that your hands are shaking after using
them. They may blur your vision for a short time or worsen
glaucoma if they go to your eyes. Close
your mouth when inhaling these medicines to prevent this.
Dry mouth, another side effect, can be avoided by rinsing
your mouth and spitting out the rinse
water.
"A randomized, double-blind,
controlled clinical study compared nebulized magnesium
sulfate with nebulized
albuterol in 33 patients with asthma (ages 12–60
years).[6] The study concluded that the serial doses
of nebulized magnesium sulfate had bronchodilatory
effects similar to those noted with nebulized albuterol." |
• Corticosteroids:
These drugs decrease the inflammation in your airways.
They may help if you often have trouble breathing from
a long-term lung disease.
You may be instructed to inhale a bronchodilator first
before using this medicine to prevent spasm (fast tightening)
in your airways. You may get a fungal infection
in your mouth when you use this medicine often. Rinse your
mouth every time after you use this medicine.
Nebulizer & glutathione:
I have found nebulized glutathione to be incredible
for my lungs. I have been doing glutathione IV's
for mopping up toxins from lyme disease. I started
doing nebulized glutathione to get it in my blood
between IV's. I recently had a cold and in the
past it always caused a severe lung infection and
bronchitis. It would take months to get back to
normal. With the glutathione inhalation, there
was much less sign of lung infection, and the bronchitis
was so minimal, I was back to normal in 2-3 weeks
instead of months. Source |
• Prostanoids:
These drugs relax blood vessels and increase blood flow
and oxygen to damaged areas of the lungs. They are used
in those with severe (very bad) lung infection or sudden
airway problems.
|
The first "powered" or
pressurized inhaler was invented in France by Sales-Girons
in
1858. This device used pressure to atomize the liquid
medication. The pump handle is operated like a bicycle
pump. When the pump is pulled up, it draws liquid
from the reservoir, and upon the force of the user's
hand, the liquid is pressurized through an atomizer,
to be sprayed out for inhalation near the user's
mouth.[4] |
I'm a big
fan of nebulizing colloidal silver. It gets the silver
directly into the bloodstream via the lungs, bypassing
the stomach.
Magnesium chloride oil should be nebulized as
an isotonic solution – delivering 7.5g magnesium
chloride per 100ml of distilled water – closely
equal to 3.5 tsp of magnesium oil per 100ml. Nebulization
of magnesium is an alternative method of treatment
for patients with pulmonary problems or infections,
or for those undergoing bronchoscopy. Magnesium nebulized
directly into the lungs offers all the same positive
therapeutic effects that other types of administration
methods do but concentrates the effects in the lung
and bronchial tissues.Source |
Nebulising
colloidal silver
Dr. Victor Marcial-Vega is a board-certified
oncologist and the director of Health Horizons Rejuvenation
Clinic in Coral Gables, Florida.
And we have the prestigious Health Sciences Institute
(HSI) to thank for bringing this to our attention.
You see, HSI addressed this very topic in an e-alert
to their members, back in October 2001, shortly after
the 9-11 terrorist attacks and subsequent anthrax attacks
on our nation.
As the HSI pointed out at the time, one of their well-known
health symposium panelists, Dr. Marcial-Vega, had discovered
while dealing with pneumonia patients the fact that colloidal
silver can be quickly and easily carried into the human
blood stream and from there into the body's cells and
tissues, simply by nebulizing it. Source
Emphysema is a terribly debilitating respiratory
illness that's sometimes referred TO as COPD, or
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Dr. Wright discusses COPD at length, and states
that nebulized, inhaled glutathione is "the
No. 1 natural treatment for COPD in my practice."
E-Alert readers will recognize glutathione
as the powerful antioxidant and amino acid molecule
that I've written about many times. In Dr. Wright's
treatment, glutathione is taken via a nebulizer;
an apparatus that dispels liquid in a fine mist
to be inhaled.
Dr. Wright cautions that by the time a COPD
diagnosis is made, lung tissue is usually so
badly damaged that nutritional treatments can't
cure most cases of COPD. But he adds, "I
can safely say that this type of therapy usually
stops and at least partially reverses the progression
of the disease. Often, improvement can be quite
significant." Source |
Nebulisation is the breaking down of a liquid into very
small droplets, which in the case of medication, can
be inhaled and in consequence deposited right into the
problem area in the lungs. The advantage of that is that
a concentrated amount can be deposited into a targeted
area. An option would be to swallow the medication which
in turn is absorbed through the gut into the blood and
finally to the lungs. The problem with that route is
that a much higher dosage would be needed to raise the
level of medication in the whole body to achieve a similar
result, and many other organs would be medicated.
If you are simply trying to clean the lungs
out then I would go with diluted food grade hydrogen
peroxide. Food grade is 35% peroxide so it needs
to be diluted before use. Start by adding one ounce
of the peroxide to 11 ounces of distilled water
to make a 3% solution. Then you would add 5-10
drops of this to your nebulizer filled with water.
I recommend doing this several times daily to help
keep infections at bay and to help promote healing.
Peroxides are generated by the body for a number
of reasons including for the destruction of pathogens,
activation of white blood cells that fight infection,
destroying cancer cells, etc. But the peroxide
does not need to be concentrated to perform these
functions. Source CureZone.com
|
Some people use a nebuliser on their Pets
Healthcare
CompMist Nebulizer, is a good option for pets
A nebulizer can administer higher
doses of medicine faster than taking it orally or getting
a shot. You can also, with your doctor' permission,
mix several medications in a nebulizer and take them
all at once.
Hi - I still have amalgams, but my Environmental
MD has prescribed me a nebulizer to use Glutathione
and B-12 (together). |
A nebulizer usually consists of parts that make the
mist, and a machine to power the nebulizer. The machine
may be mechanical or ultrasonic. A mechanical compressor
makes mist from liquid medicines using compressed air
that passes through a narrow hole. An ultrasonic machine
makes very high speed vibrations to create a mist. The
mist is made in the nebulizer in a container for the
medicine that may be used again. The container or machine
may have a valve that controls the flow of air to increase
the amount of mist you receive. A mouthpiece or mask
connects to the medicine container to bring the mist
to your lungs.
I am using the same magnesium sulphate preparation
for nebulisation as for injections. It is a 50%
solution, which some people find slightly irritant
because it may make them sneeze or cough but after
a few breaths this settles down (I found it best
just to inhale through the mouth and not the nose).
There are no theoretical or practical reasons why
anyone should get problems such as wheezing while
nebulising - indeed, magnesium works well for asthma.
Some patients respond clinically as well as if
they'd had an injection. In fact, a study in New
Zealand of magnesium by nebuliser for the treatment
of acute asthma showed this to be a very effective
treatment, over and above the effect of standard
bronchodilators. If you feel you are getting short
of breath during the nebulisation, stop the treatment. Source |
"I have been looking
all over the Web for Specific Information
on Nebulizing Food Grade
Hydrogen Peroxide and haven't had much success
finding very good quality information, I have
decided to write up what I have been doing in
regards to
Nebulizing Hydrogen Peroxide recently.
I have had quite severe Asthma for over
30 years and have had my fair share of trips
to the Emergency Department, one trip in the
back of an Ambulance to Hospital after 5 Ventolin
nebs one after another didn't work!!! I've
been on the Steroids, Ventolin, Preventers
and all the other stupid stuff that the Medical
Industry of $$$ motivated incompetence has
provided us with.
I have been able to get on top of my Asthma
in the past few years by Cleaning up my diet
(Mostly Organic food), Lung Herbs, Doing repeated
Dr Schulze Bowel, Liver and Kidney Cleanses,
some Juice Fasting etc, etc...
Just recently I had been having quite a
few problems with my chest for the past two
months which started with some sort of Cold/Flu
which got into my chest and then a particularly
bad Hayfever season we have had this year.
I even had to start using Ventolin again which
I haven't used for the past 3-4 years.
Well after a few months of my chest messing
me around and me starting to get annoyed because
it wasn't getting better, so I decided to do
something about my chest. One of the things
I started researching was Hydrogen Peroxide
Inhalation Therapy so I decided to try it for
myself.
Now for me, Nebulizing Hydrogen Peroxide
makes the most sense because it's going to
penetrate most deeply into the lungs and help
wipe out any nasties that may be lurking in
there, but the question is, how much to Hydrogen
Peroxide to use without irritating the already
sensitive lungs.
So this is what I did, over 3 - 4 days,
I nebulized 5ml of Distilled Water plus 5 -
10 drops of 3% Food Grade Hydrogen Peroxide
whenever I started wheezing and experimented
with taking a puff of Ventolin Inhaler 10 Minutes
Before or After a H2O2 Nebulizer if I felt
I needed it.
What I did find is the Hydrogen Peroxide
Nebs did seem to make the Ventolin more effective
and my consumption of Ventolin did decrease
quite significantly once I started the H2O2
Nebs. Source |
Nebulized Bicarbonate
The bronchial secretions during attack of bronchial asthma
are acidic and the acidity imparts stickiness to the secretions
and moreover there is high level of neuraminic acid, which
possibly correlates with the stickiness. Thus sodium bicarbonate
is an excellent choice for nebulization offering it’s
powerful and instant pH changing effects. Dr. Tullio Simoncini
recommends aerosol use of bicarbonate for lung and bronchial
adenocarcinoma. He recommends putting 1 soupspoon sodium
bicarbonate in ½ liter water and inhaling it with
a fast inhaler in half an hour. Six days on six days off
when in IV break phases. More
"Nebulizer for
Sinusitis
Attacks bacteria in the sinuses using aerosol technology
Using a nebulizer for sinusitis can be very
effective. The nebulizer machine delivers vapourized
liquid
medications to the infected area. To create the
vapour, the liquid medication is mixed with air,
which is then topically disposed in the nasal cavity
and maxillary sinuses." |
Along with longtime collaborator Nicolas Fasel, PhD,
of the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, and other
colleagues,
Beverley discovered that Leishmania parasites infected
with a virus – dubbed Leishmaniavirus – cause
significantly worse disease than those without a virus.
Other researchers later showed that viruses in related
parasites such as Trichomonas, which causes vaginal infections,
and potentially Cryptosporidium, which causes diarrhea,
also may exacerbate disease. Source
My husband has COPD and Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension More
There is no mystique to nebulisation. Nebulisation
for medical treatment has been around for over a century.
Not in the present form but the theory was the same.
A Dr De Vilbiss during the American Civil War found that
swabbing the throat to relieve infection was painful
and uncomfortable for the soldiers he was treating. After
that war he developed an atomiser similar to the old
fashioned scent spray to spray the throat, which was
much less painful. One of his sons developed a compressor
early in the 1900s and another son incorporated the atomiser
nozzle to invent a paint spray for motorcars. The De
Vilbiss Corporation, which specialised in compressor
manufacture, also developed the nebuliser.
Today we have the modern development of
that system. Fine-tuned and more efficient, but basically
the same.
Seasons
are changing Be Prepared
Asthma |
Flu |
Nasal |
Hay fever |
Sinus Problems |
Respiratory
Issues |
Skin |
Allergies |
Colds |
Throat |
Parasites |
Infections |
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