Spray Could Stop Spread of Flu
Stopping the spread of the flu
and other deadly diseases
could be as simple as breathing in.
Learn about Himalayan Crystal Salt Steam Inhalation
[Note: Using Natural salt saline in a simple spray inhaler
appears to be very effective against respiratory infections. We use
our Himalayan Crystal Salt brine.]
Some people exhale more germ-laden droplets than other people when they breathe,
but a simple saline spray could prevent the germs from spreading, say a team
of U.S. and German researchers.
The team, led by Prof David Edwards from Harvard University, published their
findings online ahead of print publication in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
The study could provide a way to help control flu and other viral epidemics,
such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), the researchers said.
The researchers studied the breath of 11 healthy male volunteers, giving them
an oral saline spray and then measuring how many particles they released when
coughing.
Some of the participants produced many more bioaerosols, small droplets of
fluid exhaled from the lungs that may carry airborne pathogens, something also
seen by investigators of the SARS outbreak that spread from China to cities
around the world, killing 800 people.
That could mean that about half the population produce more than 98 percent
of all disease-spreading droplets, the researchers said. Such "super-spreaders"
could be responsible for several clusters of viral infection.
"We found a sharp demarcation between individuals who are 'high' and 'low'
producers of bioaerosols," said Edwards.
"Roughly half our subjects exhaled tens of bioaerosol particles per litre,
while the other half exhaled thousands of these particles."
Edwards said the number of exhaled particles varied dramatically over time
and among subjects, ranging from a low of one particle per litre to a high of
more than 10,000.
The researchers said that more droplets were spread when people breathed with
their mouths open, as some people do habitually and which cold sufferers often
must do, than when they coughed or sneezed.
Spray stops spread
The volunteers inhaled a salt spray for six minutes via a jet nebulizer,
often used in the treatment of asthma. After the spray the high droplet
producers' output decreased by an average of 72% for up to six hours
after the inhalation, the researchers said.
Using a cough machine designed to simulate normal human breathing, the researchers
linked the saline spray to surface tension of fluid inside the lungs.
"Administration of nebulized saline to individuals with viral or bacterial
illnesses could dramatically reduce spread of these pathogens without interfering
with any other treatments," Edwards said.
"This work could also point the way to new hygiene protocols in clinical
settings as well as enclosed spaces."
Viruses known to spread from humans and animals through breathing, sneezing,
and coughing include measles, influenza, adenovirus, African swine fever virus,
foot and mouth disease, chickenpox, infectious bronchitis virus and smallpox,
among others, the researchers said.
Bacteria spread in airborne droplets include anthrax, Escherichia coli and
tuberculosis.
The researchers noted much more study was needed before a saline spray device
could be marketed to prevent the spread of diseases.
The study was funded by U.S. biotechnology company Pulmatrix.
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