The six-month study, which used the CREON2000 photonic system, was conducted by Dr. Jonathan Bernstein, an allergic asthma specialist at the University of Cincinnati.
The study involved nineteen children aged five to seventeen with allergic asthma who lived in homes with centralized ventilation systems.
Ultraviolet emitters installed in home ventilation systems reduced the frequency of asthma attacks and allergic reactions by four times, medication use was cut in half, and asthma attacks themselves became less severe.
The results of this study were reported in the May issue of the Journal of Asthma.
Ten million people in the United States suffer from allergic asthma, and poor indoor air quality only makes the problem worse. The CREON2000 photonic system, based on a number of patented advanced scientific developments, was created by Dr. Mark Glazman specifically to alleviate allergic and asthma attacks.
The study, conducted with funds from a grant from the NIH Small Business Innovation Research Support Program, confirmed M. Glazman's hypothesis that ultraviolet light is a cheap and safe way to alleviate and prevent allergic asthma attacks.
However, doctors recommended conducting a new, longer and larger study to finally confirm the observed anti-asthmatic effects.
Based on materials from the journal Consulting-Specifying Engineer |