Ions
Can Do Strange Things to You
Source:
The Rotarian
Author: Robert O'Brian
One
sweltering day in Philadelphia this summer a man sat before a small
metal box resting atop a hospital file cabinet. It was plugged into
an ordinary
wall socket. A doctor flipped a switch. Inside the box a small fan
whirred; the box hummed distantly, like a high-tension wire, and
gave off a faint, sweetish odor. Soon the man felt alert, magical,
refreshed,
as though he had been taking deep gulps of sparkling October air.
The doctor turned the machine off, switched on another that looked
just
like it. The air grew quickly stale. The man's head felt stuffy.
His eyes smarted. His head began to ache. He felt vaguely depressed
and
tired.
With this simple experiment, the scientist, Dr. Igho H. Kornblueh, of the American
institute of Medical Climatology, demonstrated the effect that atmospheric
ions can have on human beings. The first machine generated negative
ions; the second positive ions.
The
air around us is filled with these electrically charged particles. They
are generated in invisible billions by cosmic rays, radioactive
elements in the soil, ultraviolet radiation, storms, waterfall, winds,
the friction of blowing sand or dust. Every time we draw a breath they
fill our lungs and are carried by the blood to our body cells. They
appear to have a lot to do with such varied things as our moods, why
cattle grow skittish before a storm, why rheumatic joints "tingle" when
the barometer falls, and how ants know in advance that it's going to
rain, in time to block their tunnels.
Falling barometric pressure and hot, dry, seasonal winds,
such as the Alpine fohn and the Rocky Mountain Chinook, for example,
pack the air with an excess of positive ions. Not everyone is affected;
healthy young people swiftly adapt to the change. But countless others
are distressed. The aged come down with respiratory complaints, aching
joints; asthma sufferers wheeze and gasp; children grow cranky and
perverse; crime and suicide rates climb.
On the other hand, a preponderance of negative ions spices
the air with exhilarating freshness. We feel on top of the world. Dr.
C. W. Hansell, research fellow at RCA Laboratories and an international
authority on ionization, illustrates the effect with a story about
his ten-year-old daughter. "We were outside, watching the approach of a thunderstorm. I knew that clouds
of negative ions were filling the air. Suddenly my daughter began to
dance across the grass, a radiant look in her face. She leaped up on
a low boulder, threw her arms wide to the dark sky, and cried. 'Oh,
I feel wonderful!'"
Negative ions "cure" nothing
that we know of, at most afford relief only so long as one inhales
them. Many doctors doubt their therapeutic effects. But there is a
growing army of people who swear by them.
At
the University of Pennsylvania's Graduate Hospital and at Northeastern
and Frankford hospitals in Philadelphia, Dr. Kornblueh and his
associates have administered negative-ion treatments to hundreds of
patients suffering from hay fever or bronchial asthma. Of the total, 63
percent have experienced partial to total relief. "They come in
sneezing, eyes watering, noses itching, worn out from lack of sleep, so
miserable they can hardly walk," one doctor told me. "Fifteen minutes
in front of the negative-ion machine and they feel so much better they
donšt want to leave."
It was RCA's Dr. Hansell who, in 1932, stumbled upon the
behavioral effects of artificially generated ions. He notice a startling
swing in the moods of a fellow RCA scientist who worked beside an electrostatic
generator. Some days the scientist finished work alert and in bubbling
good spirits. On other days he was rude, ill-tempered, depressed. Dr.
Hansell investigated found that the scientist was happy when the generator
was adjusted to produce negative ions, morose when it was producing
positive ions. A few months later, reports of ionization research in
Europe confirmed the strange experience.
A few years ago atmospheric ions became suddenly important
to military, researchers in environmental medicine. How would they
affect men locked in submarines? In space ships? What were the possibilities
of ions therapy? Research programs multiplied, with fantastic results
.
In Philadelphia Dr. Kornblueh studied brain-wave patterns
and found evidence that negative ions tranquilized persons in severe
pain. In one dramatic test he held a negative ionizer to the nose and
mouth of a factory worker who had been rushed to Northeastern Hospital
with second-degree steam burns on his back and legs. In minutes the
pain was gone. Morphine, customarily administered in such cases, was
never necessary.
Today all burn cases at Northeastern are immediately put
in a windowless, ion conditioned room. In ten minutes, usually, the
pain has gone. Patients are left in the room for 30 minutes. The treatment
is repeated three times every 24 hours. In 85 percents of the cases
no pain-deadening narcotics are needed. Says Northeastern's Dr. Robert
McGowan, "Negative ions make burns dry out faster, heal faster and with less scarring.
They also reduce the need for skin-grafting. They make the patient
more optimistic. He sleeps better."
Encouraged
by this success in burn therapy, Dr. Kornblueh, Dr. J. R. Minehart,
Northeasternšs chief surgeon, and his associate Dr. T. A. David boldly
tried negative ions in relief of deep, postoperative pain. During an
eight month test period they exposed 138 patients to negative ions on
the first and second days after surgery. Dr. Kornblueh has just
announced the results at a London congress of bioclimatologists. In 79
cases 57 percent of the total negative ions eliminated or drastically
reduced pain."At first," says Dr. Minehart, "I thought it was voodoo.
Now I'm convinced that it's real and revolutionary."
Experiments by Dr. Albert P. Krueger and Dr. Richard F.
Smith at the University of California have shown how ionization affects
those sensitive to airborne allergens. Our bronchial tubes and trachea,
or windpipe, are lined with tiny filaments called cilia. The cilia
normally maintain a whip like motion of about 900 beats a minute. Together
with mucus, they keep our air passages free of dust and pollen. Krueger
and Smith exposed tracheal tissue to negative ions, found that the
ciliary beat was speeded up 1200 a minute and that mucus flow was increased.
Doses of positive ions produced the opposite effect: ciliary beat slowed
to 600 a minute or less; the flow of mucus dropped.
In experiments that may prove important in cancer research.
Drs. Krueger and Smith also discovered that cigarette smoke slows down
the cilia and impairs their ability to clear foreign, and possibly
carcinogenic (cancer-inducing), substances from the lungs. Positive
ions, administered along with cigarette smoke, lowered the ciliary
beat as before, but from three to ten time faster than in normal air.
Negative ions however, counteracted the effects of the smoke. Observed
Dr. Krueger, "The agent in cigarette smoke that slows down the ciliary beat is not known. Whatever
it may be, its action is effectively neutralized by negative ions,
which raise the ciliary beat as well in a heavy atmosphere of cigarette
smoke as they do in fresh air."
How do ions trip off our moods? Most authorities agree
that ions act on our capacity to absorb and utilize oxygen. Negative
ions in the blood stream accelerate the delivery of oxygen to our cells
and tissues, frequently giving us the same euphoric jolt that we get
from a few whiffs of straight oxygen. Positive ions slow down the delivery
of oxygen, producing symptoms markedly like those in anoxia, or oxygen
starvation. Researchers also believe that negative ions may stimulate
the reticuloendothelial system; a group of defense cells in our bodies
which marshal our resistance to disease.
Dr.
Krueger predicts that we shall some day regulate the ion level indoors
much as we now regulate temperature and humidity. Ironically, today's
air-conditioned buildings, trains and planes frequently become
supercharged with harmful positive ions because the metal blowers,
filters and ducts of air-conditioning systems strip the air of negative
ions before it reaches its destination. Says RCA's Dr. Hansell, "This
explains why so many people in air conditioned spots feel depressed and
have an urge to throw open a window."
Air conditioner manufacturers are designing new systems
that increase negative ionization. The American Broadcasting Co. will
equip its new 30 story New York City headquarters with ion control.
Two national concerns, Philco and Emerson Electric, already have ion
control air conditioning systems on the market. RCA, Westinghouse,
General Electric and Carrier Corp. have similar products under study
or development.
We still have much to learn about atmospheric ions . But
researches believe that these magic bits of electricity, under artificial
control, will soon be helping millions to healthier, happier, more
productive lives.
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