Introduction: Currently, there is no established treatment for Long COVID (LC), but epipharyngeal abrasive therapy (EAT) has been reported to be useful in cases of complicated chronic epipharyngitis. In this study, we performed EAT on LC patients with chronic epipharyngitis and investigated the effects of EAT on subjective symptoms, examination findings, and autonomic nervous system function.Methods: Epipharyngeal abrasive therapy (EAT) was performed on 31 patients with Long COVID with chronic epipharyngitis. We recorded changes in subjective symptoms using the EAT score and changes in bleeding during abrasion using the bleeding score. Heart rate variability analysis was performed before and after treatment to assess autonomic function.Results: Bleeding and EAT scores improved significantly over time (p < 0.01), but the autonomic function test did not show any significant improvement. Noting that, the EAT score improved earlier than the bleeding score did. Conclusions:Assuming that the improvement in autonomic function would take time, we consider EAT to be a useful treatment for patients with LC who have chronic epipharyngitis.
Objective: To evaluate the autonomic nerve stimulation effect of epipharyngeal abrasive therapy (EAT) on myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) associated with chronic epipharyngitis. Heart rate variability analysis was performed. The study was conducted by analyzing heart rate variability. Subjects and methods: A total of 29 patients with chronic epipharyngitis who underwent EAT from July 2017 to April 2018 were classified into two groups: 11 patients in the CFS group and 18 patients in the control group without CFS. The patients were classified as phase 1 during bed rest, phase 2 during nasal endoscopy, phase 3 during nasal abrasion, and phase 4 during oral abrasion. Electrocardiographic recordings were made, and autonomic function was compared and evaluated by measuring heart rate, coefficient of variation on R-R interval (CVRR), coefficient of component variance high frequency (ccvHF), and low frequency/ccvHF ratio (L/H) for each of the four phases. The Shapiro-Wilk test was performed to confirm the normality of the two groups, and the parametric test was selected. A repeated measures analysis of variance was performed to assess changes over time between the four events in the two groups. Multiple comparisons were corrected by the Bonferroni method. Comparisons between resting data and three events within each group were performed by paired t-test. Results: The CFS group had an increased baseline heart rate compared to the control group, and the CFS group had a greater increase in parasympathetic activity and a decrease in heart rate with nasal abrasion. Oral abrasion elicited a pharyngeal reflex and increased heart rate and both sympathetic and parasympathetic activity. Conclusion: The CFS group was in a state of dysautonomia due to autonomic overstimulation, with an elevated baseline heart rate. The CFS group was considered to be in a state of impaired autonomic homeostasis, with an increased likelihood that overstimulation would induce a pathological vagal reflex and the Reilly phenomenon would develop. The direct effects of EAT on the autonomic nervous system were considered to be vagus nerve stimulation and the regulation of autonomic function by opposing stimulation input to sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves. As an indirect effect, bleeding from the epipharyngeal mucosa due to abrasion was thought to restore the function of the cerebral venous and lymphatic excretory systems and the autonomic nerve center.
Introduction: Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT), in which standardized cedar pollen extract solution is administered, has been used to treat cedar pollinosis, but SLIT is problematic because it takes a long time to become effective, and some cases are ineffective even after long-term treatment. It has also been reported that lactobacillus acidophilus extract (LEX), a food-derived ingredient, alleviates various allergic symptoms. This study examined the usefulness of LEX as a treatment for cedar pollinosis in comparison with SLIT. We also examined whether the combined use of SLIT and LEX could have an early-onset of therapeutic effect on cedar pollinosis. We also examined the usefulness of LEX as a salvage therapy for patients who failed to respond to SLIT.Subjects and Methods: Fifteen patients with cedar pollinosis were divided into three groups. The three groups were: three patients in the standardized cedar pollen extract group (S group), seven patients in the lactobacillus-producing extract group (L group), and five patients in the combination group of standardized cedar pollen extract and lactobacillus-producing extract (SL group). The subjects were treated for three years, corresponding to the three scattering seasons of cedar pollen, and observed according to the evaluation items. The evaluation items were severity score based on examination findings, subjective symptom score (QOL score) based on the Japanese Standard QOL Questionnaire for Allergic Rhinitis (JRQLQ No. 1) questionnaire, nonspecific IgE level measurement by blood test, and cedar pollen-specific IgE level measurement.Results: After three years of observation, there were no significant differences in severity score and nonspecific IgE levels among the three groups, while QOL score decreased significantly between the first and third years of treatment in the L group. Cedar pollen-specific IgE levels in the S and SL groups showed an increase in the first year and a gradual decrease in the second and third years of treatment compared to the pre-treatment period. In group L, no increase was observed in the first year, and a significant decrease was observed in the second and third years during the cedar pollen dispersal period.Conclusions: The results of severity and quality of life scores indicated that it took three years of treatment for the S and SL groups to show efficacy, while the L group showed improvement in quality of life scores and cedar pollen-specific IgE levels from the first year, suggesting that LEX is useful as a treatment for cedar pollinosis. The efficacy of combination therapy with SLIT and LEX was not clear, but since the effect of LEX was observed from the early stage of treatment, it was thought that the combination therapy with LEX intake from the early stage of treatment may be effective in reducing the incidence of ineffective cases. The combination therapy of SLIT and LEX may also be useful as a salvage therapy.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.