Transnasal cooling: A Pandora’s box of transnasal patho-physiology

Transnasal cooling: A Pandora’s box of transnasal patho-physiology

Medical Hypotheses 77 (2011) 275–277 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Medical Hypotheses journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/mehy Tr...

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Medical Hypotheses 77 (2011) 275–277

Contents lists available at ScienceDirect

Medical Hypotheses journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/mehy

Transnasal cooling: A Pandora’s box of transnasal patho-physiology Deepak Gupta ⇑ Department of Anesthesiology, Wayne State University/Detroit Medical Center, School of Medicine, Box No. 162, 3990 John R, Detroit, MI 48201, United States

a r t i c l e

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Article history: Received 10 March 2011 Accepted 28 April 2011

a b s t r a c t The innovative concept of transnasal evaporative cooling for therapeutic hypothermia in cardiopulmonary-cerebro-resuscitation has therapeutic implications with evidence of rapid and selective brain cooling; however, this author wants to elicit that this concept may hold answers for many physiological phenomena which have not been explored or completely understood up till now. To affirm the physiological role of transnasal cooling, the innovative non-invasive brain temperature monitoring can help the investigators to explore and understand the following transnasal pathophysiological phenomena: (1) understanding correlation of brain temperature and sinus headache secondary to nasal blockade, (2) exploring the therapeutic role of nasal oxygen for prevention of delirium in intubated patients, (3) realizing the impact of controlled enclosed environments on the mood and affect of the inhabitants, (4) understanding the etio-pathogenesis of claustrophobia after excluding the confounding factors of morbid obesity, severe cardiopulmonary disease and incapacitating musculoskeletal diseases, (5) exploring the anthropological role of male pattern of moustache, beard and hair loss, and (6) possible development of a coolant moustache as proposed by the author. In summary, transnasal pathophysiology offers many promising lines of fruitful research to explore the non-olfactory physiological functions of nose in human beings. Ó 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

The innovation called RhinoChillÒ device (BeneChill Inc., San Diego, California) utilizes the concept of transnasal evaporative cooling for therapeutic hypothermia in cardio-pulmonarycerebro-resuscitation [1–5]. The concept of transnasal cooling demonstrated in animals and humans [6–29] has therapeutic implications with evidence of rapid and selective brain cooling; however, this author wants to elicit that this concept may hold answers for many physiological phenomena which have not been explored or completely understood up till now. The role of angularis oculi vein in selective brain cooling have been investigated [30,31] and in this regard, the Brain Temperature Tunnel™ [32] discovered by Marc Abreu to continuously monitor brain temperature across the valveless superior ophthalmic vein (the tributary of angularis oculi vein) via a surface probe placed between the right upper eye lid and superior aspect of medial canthus will help in affirming the understanding of these incompletely explored physiological concepts. The keywords ‘‘nasal cooling’’ searched in PUBMED database prompt up 177 published literatures with the first work dated year 1946. This may explain that transnasal cooling phenomenon has been mesmerizing the life scientists for decades. The author recently joined this old bandwagon because based on his personal experiences within the enclosed living environments, the author has been trying to explore this physiological phenomenon and ⇑ Tel.: +1 313 745 7233; fax: +1 313 993 3889. E-mail address: [email protected] 0306-9877/$ - see front matter Ó 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2011.04.034

have found the champions of this physiological effect who have published medical literature that may partially or completely correlate with the author’s proposed hypotheses. The transnasal cooling may be normal physiological phenomenon that we may have overlooked. This may be the phenomenon [33–42] by which the paranasal sinuses transfers the heat from the highly active deep brain structures to the cooler inspired air and in turn ensures the delivery of warmer inspired air to lungs and prevents the overheating of the deep brain structures. The development of frontal and sphenoidal sinuses with the development of brain further gives support to this explanation that increased brain surface area require increased paranasal sinus area to dissipate the increased heat production [43]. The absence of transnasal cooling effect in the intubated patients may further explain one of the contributing factors for incidence of delirium that may be easily countered by the nasal delivery of high flow oxygen or air till the patient is extubated [44,45]. This phenomenon may explain why claustrophobic patients do not tolerate the oxygen masks but does not complain about the nasal oxygen; this may be easily explained by their higher susceptibility to brain temperature fluctuations as a result of higher temperatures under the tight fitting oxygen masks that do not effectively dissipate the heat energy of the warm expired air between the inspirations [46–48]. The transnasal cooling may explain the phenomenon called White Christmas Blues in people living in snow-covered areas because their inability to go outdoors during winters exposes them to

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round-the-clock higher temperatures within the confines of heated environments. Additionally, the people’s tendency to keep higher indoor temperatures during the winters as compared to the summers to counter the outdoor temperatures further contributes to this form of depression secondary to ineffective transnasal cooling; paradoxically the target indoor temperatures during winters should be kept lower than the target indoor temperatures during summers as same indoor target temperature achieved by heating the air during winters provides poorer air quality and living comfort levels as compared to the same indoor target temperature achieved by cooling the air during summers. With scientific development, the human race has manipulated their indoor environments that everything has changed by 180° and transnasal cooling provides some of the answers to deal with some of the phenomena poorly understood up till now. For instance, the male pattern of moustache and beard hair distribution may have been meant to protect the deep brain structures from exposure to colder temperatures in the historic times before the advent of air-conditioned environments; the males may have needed this phenomenon compared to the females because higher volumes of brain matter meant the deeper brain structures are far removed from the scalp surface and its covering of insulating scalp hair and hence deeper brain structures in males were more exposed to constant dynamic transnasal cooling that required the additional thermo-insulation with the moustache and beard hair growing on the cancellous/spongy bone structures of upper and lower lip. With time, our species was able to control the living environments and the need for this supplementary thermoinsulation was lost in the temperature controlled enclosed environments. However, it seems we may have overdone in our zeal of controlling the living environments that it seems likely that we may need a coolant moustache made out of miniaturized ice wraps similar to the reusable ice insert used in Ice Bandana by Icy-Cools [49]. This innovative Coolant Moustache can be made available in a pack of a dozen for countering twelve hours of indoor exposure to higher air temperatures with poorer air quality in people known to have poor comfort levels especially during the winters. As compared to painted coolant moustache, the proposed moustache will be environmental friendly because users will be inhaling cooled air instead of evaporative coolant. The transnasal cooling may be able to explain some aspects of the male pattern hair loss that may be a very recent pathological phenomenon coinciding with the human control of their living environments and increasing ratio of human brain versus body activity level, may have higher incidence in the people with moustache, and may respond to local application of coolant emollients on the areas of hair loss. Moreover, the male pattern hair loss may be a misnomer that may become obsolete as the evolving feminism may expose the similar areas of scalp in the females to the underlying brain heat dissipation secondary to the higher cerebral activity in frontal and pre-frontal cortex and associated areas. Transnasal cooling may explain the big protruding noses in the people living in the tropical climate to prevent the hyperthermia from exposure to tropical climates [50,51]. Loss of transnasal cooling in the people exposed to Loo (a strong, hot and dry summer afternoon wind in tropical Indian subcontinent) with high incidence of heat strokes may be analogous to the milder form of discomfort felt by the people living in the enclosed warmer environments during winters. Impaired transnasal cooling may explain the sinus headaches [52] and hypopigmentation of the scalp hair in patients suffering from chronic sinusitis and rhinitis. Similarly transnasal cooling may explain the ambiguous but therapeutic role of nasal oxygen therapy in patients suffering from cluster headaches and in achieving good comfort levels at the end of life in terminally ill patients with irreversible oxygenation deficits [53–58]. Epidemiologically, dynamics of transnasal cooling may

explain the graver morbidity and mortality of the people with pulmonary diseases who are residing in the colder outdoor climates but living in the warmer indoor environments. It is important to realize that when transnasal cooling can rapidly attain protective selective brain hypothermia with maintained core body normothermia to improve the neurological outcomes after cardiac arrest, then it must be playing a subtle but significant physiological role in keeping the human population healthier and less sick in day-today life. To summarize, non-invasive brain temperature monitoring at Brain Temperature Tunnel™ can help the investigators to explore the following transnasal pathophysiological phenomena: (1) Understanding correlation of brain temperature and sinus headache secondary to nasal blockade. (2) Exploring the therapeutic role of nasal oxygen for prevention of delirium in intubated patients. (3) Realizing the impact of controlled enclosed environments on the mood and affect of the inhabitants. (4) Understanding the etio-pathogenesis of claustrophobia after excluding the confounding factors of morbid obesity, severe cardiopulmonary disease and incapacitating musculoskeletal diseases. (5) Exploring the anthropological role of male pattern of moustache, beard and hair loss. (6) Possible development of a coolant moustache as proposed by the author. In summary, transnasal pathophysiology offers many promising lines of fruitful research to explore the non-olfactory physiological functions of nose in human beings [59–62]. Conflict of interest None declared. Acknowledgements This author is deeply grateful to the encouragement given by his mentors, Dr. Harold Michael Marsh, Chair and Professor, Department of Anesthesiology, Wayne State University; Dr. William Coplin, Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Neurology, Wayne State University; and Dr. Adam Folbe, Assistant Professor, Department of Otolaryngology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, United States. References [1] Castrén M, Nordberg P, Svensson L, Taccone F, Vincent JL, Desruelles D, et al. Intra-arrest transnasal evaporative cooling: a randomized, prehospital, multicenter study (PRINCE: Pre-ROSC IntraNasal Cooling Effectiveness). Circulation 2010;122:729–36. [2] Busch HJ, Eichwede F, Födisch M, Taccone FS, Wöbker G, Schwab T, et al. Safety and feasibility of nasopharyngeal evaporative cooling in the emergency department setting in survivors of cardiac arrest. Resuscitation 2010;81:943–9. [3] Boller M, Lampe JW, Katz JM, Barbut D, Becker LB. Feasibility of intra-arrest hypothermia induction: a novel nasopharyngeal approach achieves preferential brain cooling. Resuscitation 2010;81:1025–30. [4] Wang H, Barbut D, Tsai MS, Sun S, Weil MH, Tang W. Intra-arrest selective brain cooling improves success of resuscitation in a porcine model of prolonged cardiac arrest. Resuscitation 2010;81:617–21. [5] Yu T, Barbut D, Ristagno G, Cho JH, Sun S, Li Y, et al. Survival and neurological outcomes after nasopharyngeal cooling or peripheral vein cold saline infusion initiated during cardiopulmonary resuscitation in a porcine model of prolonged cardiac arrest. Crit Care Med 2010;38:916–21. [6] Blatt CM, Taylor CR, Habal MB. Thermal panting in dogs: the lateral nasal gland, a source of water for evaporative cooling. Science 1972;177:804–5. [7] Baker MA. Influence of the carotid rete on brain temperature in cats exposed to hot environments. J Physiol 1972;220:711–28.

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