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What is Liquid-Stabilized Oxygen?

Everyone knows just how important oxygen is in life. To put it simply, without oxygen life on earth will simply be impossible. The only organisms that will survive will be those that do not require oxygen for their metabolic processes. Oxygen is so vital that man continues to develop more ways to obtain this precious element in higher concentrations than we are able to breathe in. This is the major impetus for the development of liquid-stabilized oxygen.

Liquid-stabilized oxygen is nothing more than using technology and one’s understanding of elementary chemistry in adding extra oxygen molecules to the body through means other than breathing. The way the human body obtains oxygen from the environment is through the process of respiration. Differences in air pressures between the lungs and the outside air facilitate the inward movement of air.
 

Do take note that when we inhale air, we are not inhaling pure oxygen; there are other gases as well. Oxygen only comprises about 21% of the air that we breathe.
Once oxygen is in the lungs, it diffuses through the blood, again working on the principle of gradients. Since there is lower concentration of oxygen in the blood and higher concentration of oxygen in the lungs the natural movement is for oxygen in the lungs to move towards the oxygen-depleted blood.

Liquid-stabilized oxygen doesn’t require you to inhale. Instead it requires you to drink a solution that contains hydrogen peroxide or even magnesium peroxide that has been combined with a stabilizer, usually sodium chloride since hydrogen peroxide is highly unstable in itself.

Recalling elementary chemistry, hydrogen peroxide or H2O2 can be broken down into water (H2O) and oxygen. It is the dissociation of oxygen from peroxide that is at the core of liquid-stabilized oxygen. They call it as ‘liquid-stabilized’ since hydrogen peroxide is actually water plus oxygen. Hydrogen peroxide includes 2 molecules each of hydrogen and oxygen. Combining 2 molecules of hydrogen with a molecule of oxygen will give you H2O or water. The free oxygen is what the body uses just like the oxygen that diffuses through the alveoli in the lungs. That is why they call it liquid-stabilized oxygen.

Controversy
Given the fact that it is nothing more than ‘salty water’, as a WHO official was quoted as saying, liquid-stabilized oxygen have been marketed to bring relief to people experiencing jet lag, altitude sickness, hangovers, and even insomnia. Others claim that liquid-stabilized oxygen can also cure certain cancers.

The FDA as well as the Federal Trade Commission has called the attention of manufacturers of so-called liquid oxygen to stop publishing false claims as to the therapeutic effectiveness of their product. While there have been reports of improvement in symptoms, these were anecdotal at best and couldn’t even be better than a placebo effect.

The point here is that liquid-stabilized oxygen is still very much oxygen. It is the same oxygen that we breathe through our nose. The only difference is that the oxygen molecule was added to water to form into hydrogen peroxide. This is to help facilitate the entry of oxygen through the gastrointestinal tract. Once it is there, the oxygen molecule is again cleaved from its attachment freeing it and producing water (H2O) in the process.

If liquid-stabilized oxygen can cure many conditions, then medical-grade inhalation oxygen should be many times more efficient because this is delivered straight to the lungs and to the blood without having to undergo chemical acidification by gastric acids.

Liquid-stabilized oxygen is nothing more than hydrogen peroxide or another molecule where oxygen molecule can be cleaved once it is introduced into the body. It is no different from the oxygen that we breathe; only we drink this one.

 

 
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