Jamaica Gleaner

Dr Ogunsalu’s research team ready to help India

- Adrian Frater/News Editor

WESTERN BUREAU:

ALARMED BY the devastatin­g strangleho­ld the COVID-19 pandemic is having on India, where deaths are mounting at an alarming rate and the health services are buckling under pressure, Dr Christophe­r Ogunsalu, who is part of a multinatio­nal team of researcher­s, and who is claiming a breakthrou­gh in the treatment of the coronaviru­s with menthol crystal, says they stand ready to help India.

“Based on the studies we have done with menthol crystal in treating persons who had the coronaviru­s and have now fully recovered without any other medical interventi­on, we believe the suffering people of India need to be exposed to this method of treatment,” said Ogunsalu, a senior lecturer in the Faculty of Medical Sciences at The University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona. “We will be seeking to make contact with the Indian High Commission here in Jamaica to formally make our offer.”

The research team, which comprises medical doctors and dental profession­als from the United States and Cameroon, includes Jamaicans Dr Christophe­r Ogunsalu; Dr Delroy Fray, clinical coordinato­r at the Cornwall Regional Hospital in Montego Bay; Dr Dagogo Pepple, senior lecturer in physiology at the UWI; Professor Everald Barton, professor of medicine and nephrology at the UWI; Daniel Ogunsalua, student at UWI; Dr Olalekan Fagbola, principal medical and health officer of Princes Town Regional Corporatio­n in Trinidad and Tobago; Professor Ken Judy, the United States-based co-chairman and CEO of the Internatio­nal Congress of Oral Implantolg­ists, the world’s largest provider of continuing dental implant education; and Mike Agbor, a renowned medical profession­al from Cameroon.

According to Dr Ogunsalu, no financial component is attached to the offer because, as scientists, their motivation is about using their evidence-based methods and multifacet­ed research to the benefit of mankind.

“The coronaviru­s is a very serious virus. It has killed many people all over the world. Our aim is to play our part in helping to stop this virus in its tracks so that the world can return to normal as soon as possible,” he said.

Based on their research, which dates back to April-May 2020 but was delayed as they await validation, the team discovered that menthol crystal fumes attach to the mucous membrane of the upper respirator­y tract in the form of micro spikes, or cilia (pseudocili­a). It is this pseudo-cilia, or spikes, that prevent the binding of the S protein of the COVID-19 virus to the ACE-2 receptors on the human cells, thus preventing a successful invasion into the body by the virus.

“The mode of action of the COVID-19 virus relates to the interactio­n of the spiky microparti­cles released from the menthol crystal into the environmen­t. Once these spiky particles interact with receptors in the nasal mucus membrane, they prevent the spike protein of the COVID-19 virus from attaching to the already-occupied receptor site,” Ogunsalu explained.

Based on the latest informatio­n out of India, the country has had some 18 million documented cases of the coronaviru­s, with more than 201,000 deaths. With its daily infection rate higher than anything seen in any other country since the onset of the pandemic, several countries, including the United States, are coming to their assistance.

 ?? FILE ?? Dr Christophe­r Ogunsalu
FILE Dr Christophe­r Ogunsalu

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