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Attenuation of pulmonary damage in aged lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation mice through continuous 2 % hydrogen gas inhalation: A potential therapeutic strategy for geriatric inflammation and survival.

高齢マウスのLPS誘発炎症モデルにおける2%水素ガス持続吸入による肺障害軽減効果

animal study inhalation mixed 1–2%

Abstract

Against the backdrop of rising sepsis incidence in aging populations, this animal study examined the effects of hydrogen gas inhalation on LPS-induced systemic inflammation in 21–23-month-old male mice. Eight experimental groups were established, varying H2 concentration (1% or 2%) and exposure duration (1, 6, or 24 hours). Only the 24-hour 2% H2 inhalation regimen produced significant improvements: survival rates and locomotor activity increased, while mRNA levels of inflammatory markers in lung and liver tissue declined. Lung-specific senescence-associated molecules—including CXCL2, MMP-3, arginase-1, and the cell-cycle inhibitor p21—were also downregulated. Hepatic injury induced by LPS was not meaningfully altered under any tested condition. These findings indicate that prolonged, higher-concentration H2 inhalation selectively modulates pulmonary inflammation and aging-related molecular signatures in elderly mice.

Mechanism

Continuous inhalation of 2% H2 for 24 hours suppressed mRNA expression of inflammatory cytokines and senescence-associated proteins (CXCL2, MMP-3, arginase-1, p21) in lung tissue, thereby reducing LPS-induced pulmonary injury in aged mice.

Bibliographic

Authors
Aokage T, Iketani M, Seya M, Meng Y, Ageta K, Naito H, et al.
Journal
Exp Gerontol
Year
2023
PMID
37572992
DOI
10.1016/j.exger.2023.112270

Tags

Disease:老化・フレイル 腸管障害 敗血症 Delivery:吸入投与 Mechanism:炎症抑制 酸化ストレス 活性酸素種

Delivery context

For inhalation applications of molecular hydrogen, the lower flammability limit (LFL) deserves careful handling. The classical 4% figure applies to closed-system mixtures; the practical inhalation-environment threshold is 10%. Even pure-hydrogen output (the UFL 75% paradox) passes through the flammable range at the air–gas boundary. High-concentration (66% / 100%) inhalers are documented in the Japanese Consumer Affairs Agency accident-information database and are not recommended.

Safety notes

For inhalation applications of molecular hydrogen, the lower flammability limit (LFL) deserves careful handling. The classical 4% figure applies to closed-system mixtures; the practical inhalation-environment threshold is 10%. Even pure-hydrogen output (the UFL 75% paradox) passes through the flammable range at the air–gas boundary. High-concentration (66% / 100%) inhalers are documented in the Japanese Consumer Affairs Agency accident-information database and are not recommended.

See also:

Other papers on the same disease / condition

Cite as: H2 Papers — PMID 37572992. https://h2-papers.org/en/papers/37572992
Source: PubMed PMID 37572992