Hydrogen Therapy in Cerebral Infarction TreatmentScientific Research

Hydrogen Improves Recovery After Brain Stroke (Cerebral Infarction)

Medical research suggests that hydrogen can speed up recovery following a stroke. When added to standard treatment, it leads to better brain imaging results and faster healing of brain tissue.

What Happens During a Stroke?

A stroke damages brain tissue. Initially, imaging scans show significant impairment, and although some improvement occurs over time, the tissue remains affected.

How Does Hydrogen Help?

A clinical study conducted in Japan found that hydrogen supports faster regeneration of brain cells and leads to improved brain scan results compared to standard treatment alone. Patients who received hydrogen showed better MRI outcomes and recovered more quickly.

How Was the Study Conducted?

The study was carried out in a clinical setting with patients suffering from acute brainstem infarction. Participants were divided into two groups:

  • Group 1 (E) – patients who received standard treatment without hydrogen.
  • Group 2 (EH) – patients who received hydrogen therapy in addition to standard treatment.

Hydrogen was administered intravenously via a saline solution enriched with hydrogen. Both groups were monitored over time, and brain imaging (including MRI scans) was performed regularly to track changes in brain tissue health.

Study Results

The hydrogen group (EH) showed significant improvements in MRI results, faster brain tissue recovery, and shorter recovery time for neurological markers compared to the group without hydrogen (E).

Benefits of Hydrogen Therapy

  • Faster Recovery: Hydrogen speeds up the healing process in damaged brain tissue.
  • Improved MRI Results: Patients treated with hydrogen show noticeable improvements in brain scans.
  • No Side Effects: Hydrogen therapy is safe and well-tolerated.

Conclusion

This clinical study confirms that hydrogen therapy can be a safe and effective approach for stroke recovery. By accelerating tissue repair and improving brain function, hydrogen opens new possibilities when used alongside traditional treatments—without adverse side effects.


The Original Article:

original title: Improved brain MRI indices in the acute brain stem infarct sites treated with hydroxyl radical scavengers, Edaravone and hydrogen, as compared to Edaravone alone. A non-controlled study

Authors:

Hirohisa Ono, Yoji Nishijima, Naoto Adachi, Shigekuni Tachibana, Shiroh Chitoku, Shigeo Mukaihara, Masaki Sakamoto, Yohei Kudo, Jun Nakazawa, Kumi Kaneko, Hiroshi Nawashiro

DOI: 10.1186/2045-9912-1-12

Abstract

In acute stage of cerebral infarction, MRI indices (rDWI & rADC) deteriorate during the first 3-7 days after the ictus and then gradually normalize in approximately 10 days (pseudonormalization time), although the tissue is already infarcted. Since effective treatments improve these indices significantly and in less than the natural pseudonormalization time, a combined analysis of these changes provides an opportunity for objective evaluation on the effectiveness of various treatments for cerebral infarction. Hydroxyl radicals are highly destructive to the tissue and aggravate cerebral infarction. We treated brainstem infarction patients in acute stage with hydroxyl radical scavengers (Edaravone and hydrogen) by intravenous administration and evaluated the effects of the treatment by a serial observation and analysis of these MRI indices. The effects of the treatment were evaluated and compared in two groups, an Edaravone alone group and a combined group with Edaravone and hydrogen, in order to assess beneficial effects of addition of hydrogen. The patients were divided in Edaravone only group (E group. 26 patients) and combined treatment group with Edaravone and hydrogen enriched saline (EH group. 8 patients). The extent of the initial hump of rDWI, the initial dip of rADC and pseudo-normalization time were determined in each patient serially and averages of these data were compared in these two groups and also with the natural course in the literatures. The initial hump of rDWI reached 2.0 in the E group which was better than 2.5 of the natural course but was not as good as 1.5 of the EH group. The initial dip of rADC was 0.6 in the E group which was close to the natural course but worse than 0.8 of the EH group. Pseudonormalization time of rDWI and rADC was 9 days only in EH group but longer in other groups. Addition of hydrogen caused no side effects. Administration of hydroxyl radical scavengers in acute stage of brainstem infarction improved MRI indices against the natural course. The effects were more obvious and significant in the EH group. These findings may imply the need for more frequent daily administration of hydroxyl scavenger, or possible additional hydrogen effects on scavenger mechanisms.

Original Publication
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