08-05-2022, 05:56 AM
This Just In: A Complete End-Run Around Dread Covid19 Infection's Usual Ingress-Point!!
Or,
O Brave New Genetic World!
Or,
Follow The Science & You'll Be Golden...
Australian Mary River turtle -- punk as f***
You might be able to breathe through your backside one day, just like pigs and mice! [& the Australian Mary River turtle!]
MAY 18, 2021
by Study Finds
TOKYO, Japan — When most people think of a breathing, it’s safe to say they picture taking air in through the nose and letting it out through the mouth (or nose again). Could the future of respiratory health mean taking a deep breath in and letting it out through your backside? A new study finds some mammals are able to breathe through their bottoms, with scientists adding rodents and pigs to that list. According to their findings, you may be able to add humans to the list of species using their intestines to breathe in the future.
If this is the case, intestinal ventilation systems, which pumps oxygen through the rectum, could save millions of people worldwide from respiratory failure, a team from Japan says. This is especially important when factoring in the demand for ventilators during the coronavirus pandemic.
Mammalian preclinical models, including pigs and mice, are capable of intestinal breathing, which may offer an additional route of oxygen administration to patients who need respiratory support.
Is 'back-to-front breathing' possible?
Certain aquatic organisms practice the "back-to-front breathing" to survive in places with low levels of oxygen. For example, sea cucumbers and fresh water fish (including loaches and catfish) can use their rear end instead of their lungs or gills to breathe. However, whether mammals have the same ability has been "heavily debated," until now.
"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," says study author Dr. Takanori Takebe from Tokyo Medical and Dental University in a media release.
"Although the side effects and safety need to be thoroughly evaluated in humans, our approach may offer a new paradigm to support critically ill patients with respiratory failure."
The researchers developed a gas ventilation system to administer pure oxygen through animals’ rectums and tested it on mice, rats, and pigs. Results show, without the system, no mouse survived more than 11 minutes in extremely low oxygen conditions.
With ventilation on the other hand, 75 percent of mice survived for 50 minutes in the same normally lethal conditions. Unfortunately the system required breaking the animals' intestinal barrier and so was not clinically feasible for humans, especially in severely ill patients.
Simplified view of typical healthy, unbroken intestinal barrier.
Finding new ways to breathe during COVID
To remedy this, the researchers developed a liquid-based alternative ventilator. It uses chemicals, oxygenated perfluorochemicals, which are biologically compatible and safe in humans. Researchers tested the new system on rodents and pigs exposed to low but non-lethal levels of oxygen. Both mice and pigs receiving ventilation received more oxygen and could walk faster in a chamber with 10 percent oxygen. Study authors note it also added more color to the animals' skin and helped keep them warm.
"Taken together, the results show that this strategy is effective in providing oxygen that reaches circulation and alleviates respiratory failure symptoms in two mammalian model systems," Dr. Takebe reports.
Finding new ways of treating respiratory failure has become increasingly important during COVID-19. Next, the researchers plan on expanding their pre-clinical studies and taking regulatory steps towards bringing their system to market.
"The recent SARS-CoV-2 pandemic is overwhelming the clinical need for ventilators and artificial lungs, resulting in a critical shortage of available devices, and endangering patients’ lives worldwide," Dr. Takebe concludes.
"The level of arterial oxygenation provided by our ventilation system, if scaled for human application, is likely sufficient to treat patients with severe respiratory failure, potentially providing life-saving oxygenation."
Experimental liquid-based alternative ventilator currently under development by DARPA.
The findings appear in the journal Med.
Get in on the ground floor, ahead of the curve! Why be the butt of jokes about being slow to get to the bottom of the latest developments potentially affecting your health? Don't be left behind! Breathe easy -- the fundamentally new way!
Just think -- I've gotten this far without belaboring the obvious symmetry between breathing in through one's nethermost aperture in line with the the Narrative-correct balderdash emitted when so-called "authorities" speak out their -- well, you can see where I'm headed here, au fond.
One can, of course, compare the clownishly far-fetched approach of the madly hyper-rational "scientists" playing in their virtual-reality of self-pseudo-reifying ideological abstractions in at least the first news item displayed above (the "serious" parts I didn't clown with myself, I mean; see the original article via the link at "Study Finds") to some approaches by intelligent, sane people in the real, physical world of empirical evidence gained through being both observer and participant -- and actually interested in following the truth wherever it leads. Hint: the truth leads to a certain point of view that a massive subpopulation of mankind has already announced by its words and deeds is not to be borne, and its admittance in any way, shape, or form to polite discussion to be fought to the blood.
https://www.laloftblog.com/2021/08/19/co...u-to-know/
Or,
O Brave New Genetic World!
Or,
Follow The Science & You'll Be Golden...
Australian Mary River turtle -- punk as f***
You might be able to breathe through your backside one day, just like pigs and mice! [& the Australian Mary River turtle!]
MAY 18, 2021
by Study Finds
TOKYO, Japan — When most people think of a breathing, it’s safe to say they picture taking air in through the nose and letting it out through the mouth (or nose again). Could the future of respiratory health mean taking a deep breath in and letting it out through your backside? A new study finds some mammals are able to breathe through their bottoms, with scientists adding rodents and pigs to that list. According to their findings, you may be able to add humans to the list of species using their intestines to breathe in the future.
If this is the case, intestinal ventilation systems, which pumps oxygen through the rectum, could save millions of people worldwide from respiratory failure, a team from Japan says. This is especially important when factoring in the demand for ventilators during the coronavirus pandemic.
Mammalian preclinical models, including pigs and mice, are capable of intestinal breathing, which may offer an additional route of oxygen administration to patients who need respiratory support.
Is 'back-to-front breathing' possible?
Certain aquatic organisms practice the "back-to-front breathing" to survive in places with low levels of oxygen. For example, sea cucumbers and fresh water fish (including loaches and catfish) can use their rear end instead of their lungs or gills to breathe. However, whether mammals have the same ability has been "heavily debated," until now.
"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," says study author Dr. Takanori Takebe from Tokyo Medical and Dental University in a media release.
"Although the side effects and safety need to be thoroughly evaluated in humans, our approach may offer a new paradigm to support critically ill patients with respiratory failure."
The researchers developed a gas ventilation system to administer pure oxygen through animals’ rectums and tested it on mice, rats, and pigs. Results show, without the system, no mouse survived more than 11 minutes in extremely low oxygen conditions.
With ventilation on the other hand, 75 percent of mice survived for 50 minutes in the same normally lethal conditions. Unfortunately the system required breaking the animals' intestinal barrier and so was not clinically feasible for humans, especially in severely ill patients.
Simplified view of typical healthy, unbroken intestinal barrier.
Finding new ways to breathe during COVID
To remedy this, the researchers developed a liquid-based alternative ventilator. It uses chemicals, oxygenated perfluorochemicals, which are biologically compatible and safe in humans. Researchers tested the new system on rodents and pigs exposed to low but non-lethal levels of oxygen. Both mice and pigs receiving ventilation received more oxygen and could walk faster in a chamber with 10 percent oxygen. Study authors note it also added more color to the animals' skin and helped keep them warm.
"Taken together, the results show that this strategy is effective in providing oxygen that reaches circulation and alleviates respiratory failure symptoms in two mammalian model systems," Dr. Takebe reports.
Finding new ways of treating respiratory failure has become increasingly important during COVID-19. Next, the researchers plan on expanding their pre-clinical studies and taking regulatory steps towards bringing their system to market.
"The recent SARS-CoV-2 pandemic is overwhelming the clinical need for ventilators and artificial lungs, resulting in a critical shortage of available devices, and endangering patients’ lives worldwide," Dr. Takebe concludes.
"The level of arterial oxygenation provided by our ventilation system, if scaled for human application, is likely sufficient to treat patients with severe respiratory failure, potentially providing life-saving oxygenation."
Experimental liquid-based alternative ventilator currently under development by DARPA.
The findings appear in the journal Med.
Get in on the ground floor, ahead of the curve! Why be the butt of jokes about being slow to get to the bottom of the latest developments potentially affecting your health? Don't be left behind! Breathe easy -- the fundamentally new way!
Just think -- I've gotten this far without belaboring the obvious symmetry between breathing in through one's nethermost aperture in line with the the Narrative-correct balderdash emitted when so-called "authorities" speak out their -- well, you can see where I'm headed here, au fond.
One can, of course, compare the clownishly far-fetched approach of the madly hyper-rational "scientists" playing in their virtual-reality of self-pseudo-reifying ideological abstractions in at least the first news item displayed above (the "serious" parts I didn't clown with myself, I mean; see the original article via the link at "Study Finds") to some approaches by intelligent, sane people in the real, physical world of empirical evidence gained through being both observer and participant -- and actually interested in following the truth wherever it leads. Hint: the truth leads to a certain point of view that a massive subpopulation of mankind has already announced by its words and deeds is not to be borne, and its admittance in any way, shape, or form to polite discussion to be fought to the blood.
https://www.laloftblog.com/2021/08/19/co...u-to-know/