Medical Air Compressed

Medical Air Compressed Uses, Dosage, Side Effects, Food Interaction and all others data.

Medical Air Compressed therapy, also known as supplemental oxygen, is the use of oxygen as a medical treatment. This can include for low blood oxygen, carbon monoxide toxicity, cluster headaches, and to maintain enough oxygen while inhaled anesthetics are given. Long term oxygen is often useful in people with chronically low oxygen such as from severe COPD or cystic fibrosis. Medical Air Compressed can be given in a number of ways including nasal cannula, face mask, and inside a hyperbaric chamber.

Medical Air Compressed is required for normal cell metabolism. Excessively high concentrations can cause oxygen toxicity such as lung damage or result in respiratory failure in those who are predisposed. Higher oxygen concentrations also increase the risk of fires, particularly while smoking, and without humidification can also dry out the nose. The target oxygen saturation recommended depends on the condition being treated. In most conditions a saturation of 94-98% is recommended, while in those at risk of carbon dioxide retention saturations of 88-92% are preferred, and in those with carbon monoxide toxicity or cardiac arrest they should be as high as possible. Air is typically 21% oxygen by volume while oxygen therapy increases this by some amount up to 100%.

The use of oxygen in medicine become common around 1917. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines, the most effective and safe medicines needed in a health system.

Medical Air Compressed therapy improves effective cellular oxygenation, even at a low rate of tissue perfusion. Medical Air Compressed molecules adjust hypoxic ventilatory drive by acting on chemoreceptors on carotid bodies that sequentially relay sensory information to the higher processing centers in brainstem. It also attenuates hypoxia-induced mitochondrial depolarization that generates reactive oxygen species and/or apoptosis.Studies investigating on hyperbaric oxygen therapy has shown that oxygen supplementation can induce neural stem cell proliferation in neonatal rats thus promoting neurological regeneration after injuries . CD34+, CD45-dim leukocytes are also potential targets for hyperbaric oxygen therapy benefit as their mobilization was increased in vitro which could facilitate the acceleration of recovery at peripheral sites .

Trade Name Medical Air Compressed
Availability Unknown
Generic Oxygen
Oxygen Other Names Dioxygen, Molecular oxygen, Oxigeno gaseoso, Oxygen, Oxygen USP, Pure oxygen, Oxygenium
Type Gas
Formula O2
Weight Average: 31.9988
Monoisotopic: 31.989829244
Protein binding

Oxygen binds to oxygen-carrying protein in red blood cells called hemoglobin with high affinity. The amount of oxygen molecules bound to the fixed amount of circulating hemoglobin in the blood determines the overall oxygen saturation level and this oxygen-delivering capacity is regulated by Bohr effect.

Groups Approved, Vet approved
Therapeutic Class Oxygen 99 % Gas Oxygenium
Manufacturer
Available Country United States
Last Updated: September 19, 2023 at 7:00 am
Medical Air Compressed
Medical Air Compressed

Uses

Medical Air Compressed contains not less than 99.5% v/v of O2. Medical Air Compressed labelled as having been produced by the air-liquefaction process may be exempted from the requirements of the tests for carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide.

Acute severe asthma, Anxiety, Artificially ventilated patients, Carbon monoxide poisoning, COPD, Cyanosis, Major trauma, Resuscitation, Severe hemorrhage, Shock

Medical Air Compressed is also used to associated treatment for these conditions: Anemia, Hypoxemia, Hypoxia, Malignancies, Migraine, Polycythemia, Pulmonary Hypertension (PH), Respiratory Disorders, Sleep Apnea

How Medical Air Compressed works

Medical Air Compressed therapy increases the arterial pressure of oxygen and is effective in improving gas exchange and oxygen delivery to tissues, provided that there are functional alveolar units. Medical Air Compressed plays a critical role as an electron acceptor during oxidative phosphorylation in the electron transport chain through activation of cytochrome c oxidase (terminal enzyme of the electron transport chain). This process achieves successful aerobic respiration in organisms to generate ATP molecules as an energy source in many tissues. Medical Air Compressed supplementation acts to restore normal cellular activity at the mitochondrial level and reduce metabolic acidosis. There is also evidence that oxygen may interact with O2-sensitive voltage-gated potassium channels in glomus cells and cause hyperpolarization of mitochondrial membrane .

Dosage

Medical Air Compressed dosage

Adult: Use as required

Child: Safety and efficacy has not been established

Toxicity

May cause burns or frostbites in case of eye or skin contact with rapidly expanding gas. Medical Air Compressed therapy can induce hypercapnic respiratory failure in patients with respiratory diseases and musculoskeletal diseases in upper airways. Sudden cessation of oxygen supplementation in these patients can further lead to rebound hypoxaemia. In patients with mild or moderate strokes, hyperoxaemia may cause absorption atelectasis or myocardial infarction. Medical Air Compressed content should be monitored following the administration to verify therapeutic benefit.

Food Interaction

No interactions found.

Half Life

Approximately 122.24 seconds

Elimination Route

Exhalation

Pregnancy & Breastfeeding use

Pregnancy Category: Not classified.

Contraindication

Hypersensitivity

Storage Condition

Medical Air Compressed should be kept as compressed gas or liquid at cryogenic temperature, in appropriate containers complying withthe safety regulations of the national authority. Valves or taps should not be lubricated with oil or grease.

Innovators Monograph

You find simplified version here Medical Air Compressed

*** Taking medicines without doctor's advice can cause long-term problems.
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