Ozone treatment
Ozone treatment is an elective clinical treatment that acquaints ozone or ozonides with the body. In April 2003, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) denied all clinical employments of ozone, "In any ailment for which there is no verification of wellbeing and adequacy", expressing "Ozone is a poisonous gas with no known valuable clinical application in explicit, adjunctive, or preventive treatment. With the end goal for ozone to be powerful as a disinfectant, it must be available in a fixation far more prominent than that which can be securely endured by man and creatures."
Ozone treatment has been sold as a doubtful therapy for different diseases, including malignancy, a training which has been described as "unadulterated deception". The treatment can cause genuine unfavorable impacts, including passing.
Ozone treatment comprises of the presentation of ozone into the body by means of different strategies, ordinarily including its blend with different gases and fluids before infusion, with potential courses including the vagina, rectum, intramuscular (in a muscle), subcutaneously (under the skin), or intravenously (legitimately into veins). Ozone can likewise be presented through autohemotherapy, in which blood is drawn from the patient, presented to ozone and re-infused into the patient.
This treatment has been proposed as an essential or extra treatment for different ailments, including osteoarthritis, herniated plate, persistent injuries, hepatitis B and C, herpes zoster, HIV-AIDS, various sclerosis, malignant growth, coronary illness, Alzheimer's dementia, and Lyme infection, however steady proof for a portion of these applications is restricted. The American Cancer Society cautioned in 2010 that proof for the viability of ozone treatment against malignant growth is uncertain, and the treatment might be perilous. For treatment of HIV/AIDS, despite the fact that ozone deactivates the viral particles outside the body, very much planned examinations have appeared there is no advantage for living patients.
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