7% Saline Solution
Got a supply of 7% vials and got a real jolt in my throat when I began inhaling it. However I quickly adapted to it and was able to finish the vial. Within a few minutes I was coughing and bringing stuff up - a first. I never had a timely response to 0.9. Bottom line: I guess the 7% solution is...well the real solution. Not to be confused with the Sherlock and Sigmund thing. Forgive my corny effort at mirth. Don
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@anunez Hi there! Keep on trying to use the 7% saline. It helps to kill the mac. Don't do the whole vial at once if it irritates your lungs too much. They will need to build up a tolerance for it. Nebulize as to what is slightly uncomfortable for you. The object is to irritate the lungs enough to cause you to cough up gunk.
@lorifilipek, I don't know how you figure a pari compressor would double as a ventilator.
@kathyhg, Just bear in mind, this 7% saline is supposed to irritate you into a coughing spasm. That is how it works to bring the gunk up. I am so used to 7% now that it doesn't even phase me. I wish it did!
@kathyhg You do get used to the 7% over time. At least , I did. Your comment about the blood, could be taken another way; it might be that the saline is digging deeper down into the lungs where you already had a bleed going on and is bringing that up. Best to ask your dr about it. All I know is; I do fine before taking my inhaled tobramycin for 28 days; do terrible while on it, then am even better afterwards. My point is; sometimes things needs to be uncomfortable before they get better. I am no medical expert, so you should discuss this with your dr.
@windwalker Hi Terri, I had no idea how a ventilator worked when I wrote that. I thought maybe it pumped air/oxygen into the lungs, like through the tube used with a nebulizer. I just read more about ventilators and they're far more complicated and more controlled than that. Personally, I don't want to be on a ventilator because of the sometimes permanent and very damaging side effects. From what I've read only a small percentage of people on ventilators with Covid-19 survive and there are have recently been questions by some doctors about whether ventilators help or harm for Covid-19. At this point, I'd rather just take my chances with IV vitamin C (started early), oxygen, and proning. See, e.g., https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/14/nyregion/new-york-coronavirus.html
@lorifilipek That was a very interesting. I had never heard of proning, but trust me, I have copied parts of that article and put them in a file in case I get this virus. Nan
@anunez our mentor, windwalker, gave some good advice regarding the 7%saline. My pulmonologist started me on it as soon as I was diagnosed so I don’t know anything different, but gradually increasing what you can I think is a really good idea. Although each case is different, I have been fortunate in not contracting MAC/NTM yet (was diagnosed in 2017).
@lorifilipek Very interesting - my daughter is in a Midwestern ER, and the docs there, by their protocol, have always resisted using vents as long as possible because of all the downside issues. She said they are taking the same approach with Covid-19, but because she is in ER, not ICU, doesn't know about the "proning."
Here is a link for those who like scientific data. This has charts about what salinity % kills various organians. It is slightly different from a previous article I had posted. This is a good one to print and give to drs who may not be familiar with saline therapy. https://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2820%2931201-0
@windwalker Check your link.... On pandemic, not saline.