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Oxygen Therapy
For Weight Loss
Copyright - 2004 Trevor Johnson
Diet Words
http://www.DietWords.com
The chemistry sounds very straightforward. Human body fat is
a combination of three elements - hydrogen, carbon and oxygen molecules (plus other substances that are stored within the
fat cells).
Add extra oxygen to the body fat, and in theory it should break
down into two well known substances:
* Hydrogen & oxygen molecules (H2O - water, which enters the
blood stream, goes through the kidneys and is then excreted
via urination); &
* Carbon & oxygen molecules (CO2 - carbon dioxide, which is excreted
via respiration).
Oxygen or Ozone Therapies are used by a number of alternative medicine
practitioners around the world. It is more popular in Europe than in the
USA. Practitioners are also found in Canada and Mexico.
Despite being banned in some countries and certainly debunked by large
sections of the "conventional" medical profession, there is
plenty of evidence that oxygen therapy produces health benefits for many
conditions far cheaper, much faster and without the side effects of patent
drugs.
Oxygen therapy is usually administered in one of two ways:
* A facial mask attached to an oxygen tank, so that the patient breaths
in oxygen for many hours of the day; or
* Daily sessions of diluted hydrogen peroxide administered via an intravenous
drip.
Given the straightforward chemical composition
of body fat
discussed above, does Oxygen Therapy actually work for weight
loss? I decided to contact a number of practitioners in various
parts of the world and ask them if, when treating patients for
other ailments using oxygen therapies, weight loss was ever
seen as a side-effect of their treatment.
All the doctors who replied responded that no such weight loss
factor has ever been observed that they could credit to the
oxygen therapy itself, and not the condition they were treating.
It seems that empirical evidence to support the theory that
oxygen therapy could reduce body fat into the easily excreted
H2O and CO2 is lacking.
Still, not everyone is convinced. The chemistry appears fine on paper,
so something is missing in the implementation. Finding that missing factor
could be crucial in the battle of the bulge, the quest for weight loss,
and conquering obesity.
Books have been written promoting special breathing techniques for weight
loss. Although there are skeptics, there are also many people around the
world who swear by the success they have achieved in losing weight via
these breathing techniques.
The theory behind these breathing techniques is not merely due to the
intake of the oxygen, but that the human body's metabolic process expels
waste matter, including carbon dioxide, when we breath out. Our air intake
is higher in oxygen than what we expire, and we breath out more carbon
dioxide than we breath in.
The breathing technique therefore seeks to encourage and maximize the
expulsion of carbon dioxide from our bodies - carbon dioxide that is the
waste matter created when the
oxygen dissolves body fat.
Personally, I must admit to being impressed though not thoroughly convinced.
It is quite reasonable to assume that the people who are disciplined enough
to follow this breathing
technique diligently for several weeks or months are probably motivated
enough to also be doing other things (dietary, psychologically, etc.)
that will be causing the weight loss.
Still, it fits the basic (unproven) theory that adding oxygen to body
fat should result in weight loss. Furthermore, it is harmless, so long
as adequate dietary intake of antioxidant
vitamins and minerals are being consumed. Whether the actual results are
from the technique itself or of a more psychosomatic nature is immaterial
if it works, is free and available to all, and has no adverse side effects.
By all means, add these deep breathing exercises to your overall toolbox
of synergistic weight loss treatments.
Still, there is one more form of oxygen therapy (not usually recognized
as such) that even the skeptics would have trouble disputing.
It is more commonly called exercise. More accurately, aerobic exercise.
(Aerobic simply means "air breathing".) It is exercise that
makes you huff and puff, deepening your breathing. It is and always has
been one of the most fundamental parts of any successful weight loss program.
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Trevor Johnson is a Masters qualified researcher cum electronic
publisher with over twenty years personal experience in the
battle against obesity. Objective information and the pros and
cons of many types of weight loss therapies is found at his
"Weight Loss, Dieting & Obesity"
site: http://www.DietWords.com
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