Mental Wellness

The Role of Oxygen in Healing the Body

"Healing" is a word that gets thrown around a lot and it’s important to understand exactly what it means. Healing means getting your body back into a balanced, functioning state. Think of it like balance scales – the kind you might see at a courthouse. When you’re sick, one side hangs lower than the other. When you’re healthy, they’re level.

Your body wants to be in balance and will seek to heal itself if it's out of balance. Or, at least, it will try to. What's the deciding factor? Oxygen. Oxygen is necessary for healing in injured tissues. [1] Researchers at Ohio State University found that wounded tissue will convert oxygen into reactive oxygen species to encourage healing. [2]

What Are Reactive Oxygen Species?

Reactive oxygen species, also known as oxygen radicals or pro-oxidants, are a type of free radical. A free radical is a molecule that lacks an electron but is able to maintain its structure.

To most people, that doesn't mean much. We just hear from marketing messages that free radicals are bad. Which is true... when your body is not in control of them. When in balance, your body actually uses free radicals to heal. It has everything to do with the nature of oxygen.

Oxygen is an element with eight protons and eight electrons. In this state, oxygen is completely neutral. Oxygen likes to share its electrons; that makes it reactive. Sometimes when it shares an electron or two, it doesn’t get them back. When that happens, oxygen becomes an ion, meaning it’s missing an electron. Ionized oxygen wants to replace the electron it’s missing. In this form, oxygen becomes singlet oxygen, superoxides, peroxides, hydroxyl radicals, or hypochlorous acid. These forms of oxygen try to steal an electron anywhere they can, this can be destructive.

Forms of Reactive Oxygen Species

Singlet Oxygen

This radical form of oxygen can act in one of two ways. It can trigger the genes inside a cell to start cell death. Or, if it encounters a lipid or fatty acid, it will oxidize the lipid. [3] Think of it like corrosion.

Superoxides

We're still learning about superoxides but it seems they affect how the body destroys cells and manages wound healing. [4]

Peroxides

Hydrogen peroxide and hypochlorite help heal tissue. [5] Oxygen radicals form when hydrogen peroxide interacts with reduced forms of metal ions or gets broken down and produces hydrogen radicals. Hydrogen radicals are destructive. [6]

Hypochlorous Acid

Hypochlorous acid contains oxygen and chloride. It can affect tissue through chlorination or oxidation. [7]

Effects of Reactive Oxygen Species in the Body

Every time your muscles contract, you produce and use reactive oxygen species. High-intensity exercise causes reactive oxygen species levels to increase, leading to fatigue and muscle failure. [8] The energy created by mitochondria creates reactive oxygen species. Exposure to tobacco smoke, alcohol, toxic metals, pollution, chemicals, germs, and stress also creates reactive oxygen species. [9]

When your body can keep up with and remove unneeded reactive oxygen species, you remain in balance. If reactive oxygen species become too abundant, the oxidative stress can be overwhelming. It's at this point that antioxidants are a helpful defense against free radicals.

How Oxygen Fuels the Body

Every cell in your body requires oxygen. Every breath supplies blood with oxygen to be carried throughout your entire body. Oxygen is converted to energy in a process known as cellular metabolism.

What Else Does the Body Need for Healing?

Oxygen isn't the only factor that contributes to the healing process. Your health can quickly fall apart if your body doesn't eliminate waste and toxins. Accumulated waste in the intestines or colon means that toxins are lingering in your body.

Simple steps can help keep your digestive tract clear. Drink plenty of water, exercise, and regularly cleanse your colon, liver, and kidneys. Oxy-Powder® is an oxygen-based colon cleanse formula that releases monoatomic oxygen into the digestive tract to support digestion, soothe the colon, and ease occasional constipation.

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