COVID-19: Researchers find new routes for oxygen

Date: 26.05.2021  Author: Shakoor Rather 
https://www.dw.com/en/covid-19-researchers-find-new-routes-for-oxygen/a-57598013


Ventilators are in demand because of COVID-19. Supply is tight.

As an alternative, could we get oxygen through our backsides?

It's not as odd as you might think.

Japanese researchers say mammals can breathe through their intestines.

The researchers put pigs and rodents in life-threatening situations by reducing 
oxygen flow, and then they prevented respiratory failure by delivering oxygen 
via the animals' rectums.

Their findings, published in the journal Med, could pave the way for new 
therapies to balance oxygen levels in humans when their lungs fail, and 
mechanical ventilation is limited or unavailable — as is often the case for 
COVID-19 patients who need intensive care.    Ref: 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.medj.2021.04.004

"Artificial respiratory support plays a vital role in the clinical management 
of respiratory failure due to severe illnesses, such as pneumonia or acute 
respiratory distress syndrome," write the researchers, including lead author 
Takanori Takebe, of the Tokyo Medical and Dental University.

"Although the side effects and safety need to be thoroughly evaluated in 
humans, our approach may offer a new [way] to support critically ill patients 
with respiratory failure," Takebe said in a Cell Press article.

Ref: 
https://www.labmanager.com/news/mammals-can-use-their-intestines-to-breathe-25883

Takebe said the inspiration for the research came from some aquatic organisms 
that are known to breathe from the gut.

So the researchers wanted to see whether the same was true in mice, rats and 
pigs — common animal subjects new ideas are tested on humans.

"Also, we know that [parts] of the rectum are suitable for drug or nutrient 
absorption," Takebe said.

The rectum can serve as a route to administer drugs or fluids, which are then 
absorbed by blood vessels and flow into the body's circulatory system.

Oxygenation like an enema
The researchers injected oxygen through the rectums of anesthetized mice in an 
oxygen-deprived environment, using an enemalike procedure.

An enema involves inserting a liquid into the rectum or colon by way of the 
anus. Simple enemas from a pharmacy may consist of a bottle and nozzle with a 
liquid solution.

In their study, the researchers say that mice died after 11 minutes of 
extremely low-oxygen conditions.

But they say that when they used their method of providing oxygen through the 
rectum, 75% of mice survived 50 minutes of deadly low-oxygen conditions.

Limited application

The procedure is "limited to 20-60 minutes and is not a permanent rescue," the 
researchers said.

They said they also had to scrape the intestinal lining for the method to work.

That makes it unlikely to be clinically feasible, especially in severely ill 
patients, they said. And other experts in the field agree.

"The intestine was scraped to thin it so that oxygen could be absorbed by thin 
membranes, and that showed the improved oxygenation," Dr. Akshay Budhraja, a 
pulmonary consultant at the Aakash Healthcare Super Speciality Hospital in New 
Delhi, told DW.

"But this idea seems impractical on humans, considering the complex human 
anatomy and the procedure of thinning the intestine or any other visceral layer 
in a sick patient," Budhraja said.

Budharaja was not involved in the Japanese study. But India is battling an 
intensive wave of COVID-19 infections and has a shortage of traditional 
ventilation machines as a result. So, any new research would be welcome. And 
not only there.

The pandemic has overwhelmed the need for ventilators worldwide.

Ventilators are machines that pump air into the lungs to keep sick or injured 
patients who cannot breathe sufficiently themselves alive.

Previous trials in Spain

The idea of "anal oxygenation" has been tested before. Researchers tried it on 
human COVID-19 patients in a small study in Spain in 2020.

Their study, published in the journal SN Comprehensive Clinical Medicine, 
evaluated the effectiveness of introducing ozone through the rectum in four 
COVID-19 patients with severe pneumonia.

They found that rectal ozone improved levels of oxygen in the blood and 
decreased inflammation in patients with severe COVID-19 pneumonia. Ozone is a 
gas made up of three oxygen atoms.

The authors concluded that rectal ozone was an effective, safe, cheap and 
simple alternative for the management of severe pneumonia in COVID-19 patients.

Other health benefits

The Japanese study, meanwhile, found that administering liquid oxygen through 
the intestines also provided therapeutic benefits to rodents and pigs exposed 
to nonlethal low-oxygen conditions.

Mice receiving the therapy could walk farther in an oxygen-deprived chamber. 
More oxygen reached the heart, compared to those that did not receive oxygen 
through the rectum.

The researchers found similar results in pigs, who share more physiology with 
humans than mice.

Promise in humans

The Japanese scientists said that if the new method of injecting oxygen through 
the anus were scaled for human application, it could be used to treat patients 
with severe respiratory failure as seen in COVID-19 patients.

Budhraja said there was still a long way to go for the method to be effectively 
used in humans.

Intestines have a limited capability to exchange gas, Budhraja said, which 
means that they may not be able to maintain an optimum oxygen level in 
life-threatening situations and prevent damage to vital organs.

Takebe said more work would need to be done to "cautiously evaluate" the safety 
of the process in humans. The team plans to expand its preclinical studies and 
apply for permission to carry out the clinical trials within the next two years.

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