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Vitamins C And E Support
Breathing Following An Operation September 12, 2002 (Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research) -- Patients who have
recently undergone an operation experience less breathing problems after being given a
cocktail of vitamins C and E. This is the conclusion reached by researchers from the
Leiden University Medical Center following experiments with patients and healthy
volunteers. During the first two to three days after a major abdominal operation, most
patients have frequent episodes of airway obstruction and hypoxaemia. This can lead to an
increase in the heart rate and blood pressure, which can eventually result in heart muscle
damage. An apparently restful patient where nothing seems to be wrong can then suddenly
experience an unexpected heart attack. The breathing problems are a side effect of the necessary sedatives and
painkillers which recovering patients receive. The researchers from Leiden discovered
that the medicines enhance each other's undesirable side effects. In searching for the mechanism behind the breathing problems, it
transpired that the administration of vitamins C and E prevents many of the problems.
After an encouraging experiment with vitamins C and E on an experimental animal, the
researchers subjected 34 healthy men to a test. The volunteers received less oxygen than
normal for a period of three minutes. Prior to this some of the men had to take sedatives
and vitamins C and E. Another group were not allowed vitamins. The group who had taken vitamins experienced fewer disruptions to the
breathing than the control group who had not taken vitamins. The researchers suspect that
stress and pain after an invasive operation bring about a positive effect. Stress and pain
keep the body, and thereby the breathing, relatively alert.
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