The goal of this clinical trial is to see if several weeks of self-administered, home-based, treatment involving breathing hydroxy gas (a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen) for at least 2 hours a day for 3 weeks, will relieve symptoms in patients suffering from Long COVID. The main question it aims to answer is whether inhaling hydroxy gas might be a useful treatment option to help patients with long COVID cope better and recover quicker from this condition. Participants will wear a nasal canula (placed in their nostrils) to inhale a gas from a machine that they will be trained to use at home. In one 3-week period, the machine will deliver hydroxy gas (treatment) and in a separate 3-week period the machine will deliver normal air (placebo). The order of the treatment or placebo periods will be randomized and separated by a minimum of 3-weeks during which the participants will not use the machine ('washout' period). Neither the participant nor the investigators will know which 3-week period is the treatment and which is the placebo phase. Participants will visit the laboratory (or be tested at home) at the start and end of each 3-week period. Testing will involve measuring physical ability (handgrip strength, how far they can walk in 6 minutes, how many times they can stand up and sit down in a minute), breathing problems (how hard they can blow out, how breathless they feel), cognitive ability (how quickly they can mark out a trail based on numbers and letters), and state of mind (mood). The investigators hypothesize that compared to inhaling placebo, inhaling the hydroxy gas will produce greater improvement in physical ability, relieve breathing problems, and enhance cognitive ability and mood, thereby showing that it can relieve key symptoms of long COVID
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
25
Hydroxy gas is a combination of hydrogen and oxygen together.
Oxford Brookes University
Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGBreathlessness
Total dyspnoea score in the preceding 2 weeks, quantified from the D-12 questionnaire (% maximum score). Sample size estimate was based on this measure.
Time frame: Week 0 and Week 4 (just before and after the first 3 week period of home-administration), Week 6 and week 10 (just before and after the start of the second 3 week period of home-administration).
Exertional dyspnea
Change in total dyspnoea score from rest to peak exercise quantified using the D12 questionnaire
Time frame: Week 0 and Week 4 (just before and after the first 3 week period of home-administration), Week 6 and week 10 (just before and after the start of the second 3 week period of home-administration)
Physical capacity (muscle fatigue)
(i) Distance walked at their own pace during the 6-minute walk test and the number of sit to stands achieved in 1 minute. (ii) Handgrip strength measured using a hand dynamometer as the maximum squeeze (kg) sustained for 5 second (iii) Peak expiratory flow rate (PEF) achieved by blowing into a Wright's peak flow meter as hard as possible (Liters per minute)
Time frame: Week 0 and Week 4 (just before and after the first 3 week period of home-administration), Week 6 and week 10 (just before and after the start of the second 3 week period of home-administration)
Psychological state and cognitive ability
(i) Mood cluster scores for "sedation", "discontentment", and "tension" derived from the Bond Lader mood questionnaire (%full scale) (ii) Time taken to complete a trail marking task based on joining sequential numbers and/or letters
Time frame: Week 0 and Week 4 (just before and after the first 3 week period of home-administration), Week 6 and week 10 (just before and after the start of the second 3 week period of home-administration)
General long COVID symptom burden
Overall % score on the long COVID Symptom Burden Questionnaire
Time frame: Week 0 and Week 4 (just before and after the first 3 week period of home-administration), Week 6 and week 10 (just before and after the start of the second 3 week period of home-administration)
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