boski
CH.com Alumnus
 
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CH'S Suck for all that Suffer / The Pain The Pain
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Hey Peter:
Going to nuro tomorrow and will ask. I was a heavy smoker for years and have stopped for 9 years now but do feel funny in lungs after breathing heavy O2 for awhile. I have also asked that question. I feel it mostly on the left lung. But I feel something there I don't normally feel. I found this article from 2004 which I was Razed about. But it is good to know before you do something that does damage because of some other thing you did in your life.
It is from a Doc they talk about on this site!
From the newsletter Headliner, 2004, Issue 33, published by the Michigan Head-Pain & Neurological Institute. Reprinted with permission.
"High Oxygen Flow Rates for Cluster Headache" by Todd D. Rozen, M.D., Neurologist
As discussed in previous issues of the Headliner, cluster headache patients require effective abortive therapy due to the extreme intensity of their pain. The two most effective cluster abortives are injectable sumatriptan and inhaled oxygen. However, since a large percentage of cluster sufferers are cigarette smokers and at high risk for coronary artery disease, many cannot be treated with the various triptan medications. In these cases, oxygen therapy becomes the preferred option.
Oxygen, the safest of all cluster therapies, is usually prescribed based on a landmark study by Dr. Lee Kudrow. In this study, patients were instructed to use 100% oxygen via a nonrebreather face mask at 7-10 liters/minute. Although usually effective, a certain subset of cluster patients do not achieve relief from this treatment. The author hypothesized that treating patients with higher flow rates of oxygen, up to 15 liters/minute, might provide relief to those sufferers who had not responded to standard oxygen therapy regimens.
Because MHNI has many intractable cluster patients, it was decided that a higher dose of oxygen therapy would be utilized in a few patients. Several important cases recently reported in the medical literature, found this therapy to be quite effective in patients who previously did not respond to lower dose oxygen inhalation.
MHNI's experience indicates patients who do not respond to the standard flow rates should be given the opportunity to use up to 15 liters/minute. However, prior to initiating this therapy, patients must obtain clearance from their primary care physician since serious lung disease and other conditions can make oxygen therapy unsafe or inappropriate. In addition, such oxygen therapy should not be used for more than a maximum of 10-20 minutes at a single setting.
The basis by which oxygen turns off a cluster headache is unknown at this time. Oxygen's constrictive effect on cerebral blood vessels may play a significant role.
Further study and a larger sample size is needed to provide conclusive evidence regarding the usefulness of high oxygen flow rates for difficult-to-treat cluster headache patients.
Headliner is published and privately distributed by the Michigan Head-Pain & Neurological Institute for informational use by our patients and friends. Rights to reproduction belong exclusively to Michigan Head-Pain & Neurological Institute. For additional copies or further information contact: Jeffrey Pingel, Ph.D., or Scott Madden, Editors, Headliner Michigan Head-Pain & Neurological Institute 3120 Professional Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Last modified: 2004
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