Ethics code: IR.SHAHED.REC.1398.130
Clinical trials code: IRCT: IRCT20200309046727N1
Akbari Mashak K, Agin K, Emaratkar E, Gholami Fesharaki M, Namdar H. Title: Reactive airway dysfunction syndrome caused by chlorine gas from the point of view of Persian Medicine: A review article. tkj 2023; 14 (4) :77-90
URL:
http://tkj.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-1219-en.html
Shahed University , H.namdar@shahed.ac.ir
Abstract: (520 Views)
Introduction: Chlorine gas inhalation is a toxic respiratory irritant associated with high lung complications. Despite its wide industrial and domestic applications such as bleaching detergents, there is no specific treatment for chlorine gas poisoning yet and common standard treatments are mostly supportive. In this regard, this study aimed to find a new treatment for this pathogenesis from the perspective of Persian medicine (PM).
Materials and methods: In this review study, at first, we searched the etiologies and clinical symptoms associated with chlorine gas poisoning in modern medicine and then compared them with similar etiologies and symptoms in valuable Persian medical manuscripts. Then we reviewed the proposed treatments for similar illnesses from the point of view of PM.
Results: The pathology of lung damage caused by inhalation of chlorine gas is reactive airway dysfunction syndrome (RADS), which leads to dyspnea, hypoxemia, respiratory tract obstruction, pneumonia, pulmonary edema, and finally acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). In a comparative study, it seems that this pathology has the closest similarity with the Persian term“Varme-e-harr riye”. The treatment strategy for this syndrome in PM is bloodletting at the first and then the application of cold-temperament foods and medications to improve the lungs.
Conclusion: According to the compatibility of acute pulmonary edema caused by chlorine inhalation and “varam-e-harr riye” in PM, it seems that wet cupping can be considered as a suggested primary and emergency treatment for this pathology in future clinical studies.
Keywords: Reactive airway dysfunction syndrome (RADS), Persian Medicine, Chlorine gas, Acute pulmonary edema
Type of Study:
Review Article |
Subject:
Chemical agents Received: 2022/12/2 | Accepted: 2023/03/1 | Published: 2023/03/1
* Corresponding Author Address: Department of Traditional Persian Medicine, School of Persian Medicine, Shahed University, opposite Holy shrine of Imam Khomeini, Khalij Fars Expressway, Tehran, Iran. Post cod: 18155159 |