• Comment lire études peer-reviewed H₂ — guide débutant HYDROGENYX

The Source — the HYDROGENYX Journal

Cómo leer estudios peer-reviewed H₂ — Guía principiante

Paul Fournier


Reading a scientific study on molecular hydrogen doesn't require a doctorate—just a method and 6 key checks. Of the hundreds of studies published on H₂, most follow the same IMRaD structure. This guide teaches you how to navigate them in 10 minutes: where to find the real results, distinguish correlation from causation, identify biases, and recognize a solid study from weak evidence. You'll be able to judge for yourself, without relying on marketing summaries.

Prerequisites

  • Materials: Access to PubMed (free) or Google Scholar.
  • Time: 10-15 min per study (vs 1 hr for full reading).
  • Level: Beginner. No statistical skills required.

1. Step-by-step Method — Reading an H₂ Study in 5 Sections

Step 1 — Check the Publication Type

First and foremost: is it published in a peer-reviewed journal? Look for the journal name (Free Radical Research, Medical Gas Research, J Clin Biochem Nutr, etc.). Check via Scimago Journal Rank (sjr.com): Q1 or Q2 = solid; Q3 or Q4 = to be confirmed. Avoid unpublished "preprints" and conferences without peer review.

Step 2 — Read the Abstract

The abstract provides 95% of the useful information in 250 words. Read in this order:

  • Objective: what did they want to prove?
  • Methods: RCT (Randomized Controlled Trial)? How many participants? How long? What H₂ dose?
  • Results: concrete numbers and p-value (< 0.05 = statistically significant).
  • Conclusion: what do the authors recommend?

Step 3 — Identify the Quality of the Design

Hierarchy of evidence (from strongest to weakest):

  1. Meta-analysis of multiple RCTs (Gold)
  2. Double-blind placebo RCT (Silver)
  3. Open-label single-arm RCT (Bronze)
  4. Observational / cohort study (useful but limited)
  5. In vitro / animal study (preliminary)
  6. Individual clinical cases (anecdotal)

Step 4 — Read the Results Section and Tables

Tables contain the real figures. Look for:

  • Effect size: absolute delta (e.g., magnitude of change in a marker).
  • P-value: < 0.05 = significant; < 0.001 = highly significant.
  • 95% Confidence Interval (CI95): if the interval includes 0 or 1 (depending on metric), the effect is not reliable.
  • Drop-outs: how many dropped out of the study? > 20% = possible bias.

Step 5 — Read the Discussion and Limitations

Honest authors list the limitations of their study (limited sample, short duration, possible bias). A study WITHOUT a limitations section = be wary. Also read "Funding source": conflicts of interest?

2. Common Mistakes

Mistake #1 — Relying on the title alone. Titles are often optimistic. Always read the full abstract. A title like "H₂ improves athletic performance" might hide "in only 8 cyclists, p=0.049, unconfirmed".

Mistake #2 — Confusing correlation and causation. "H₂ drinkers are less fatigued" ≠ "H₂ reduces fatigue." Only a controlled RCT proves causation. Observational studies = hypotheses.

Mistake #3 — Ignoring sample size. N=10 = weak signal. N=100+ = robust signal. Meta-analyses combine multiple studies to reach N=1000+.

Mistake #4 — Confusing PPB and biological concentration. 9,000 PPB in water ≠ 9,000 PPB in blood. H₂ bioavailability ~30-40%, short half-life. Read pharmacokinetic studies separately.

Mistake #5 — Citing a clinical case as general proof. "Mrs. X was cured thanks to H₂" is a case, not proof. Level 6 in the hierarchy, anecdotal value only.

3. FAQ — Your 5 Frequent Questions

Q1. How many H₂ studies exist in total?
~1,800 publications mention molecular H₂ on PubMed. Several hundred are human clinical studies. This is the body of work we follow.

Q2. Which journals should I follow to stay up-to-date?
Free Radical Research, Medical Gas Research, Antioxidants, Journal of Clinical Biochemistry and Nutrition. Free Google Scholar alerts for "molecular hydrogen."

Q3. How can I access studies for free?
PubMed Central (PMC): 60% of H₂ studies are open access. For paid ones: direct request to the author (often free) or access via a university library.

Q4. Are Japanese studies reliable?
Yes, Japan has been a world leader in H₂ research since 2007 (Ohsawa, Nat Med). Tsukuba, Nagoya, Kyushu Universities produce the majority of RCTs.

Q5. How do I know if HYDROGENYX has referenced a study?
Our cornerstone /blogs/la-source/7-etudes lists the 7 main RCTs. Our thematic articles (sport, anti-aging, brain fog) cite specific studies with PubMed links.

Switch to the HYDROGENYX Flask — backed by published H₂ research

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Paul Fournier, founder of HYDROGENYX. French brand, after-sales service and warranty in France. Several hundred studies published on molecular hydrogen. La Source — HYDROGENYX Journal.

The HYDROGENYX Flask is a water preparation device, not a medical device. It does not prevent, treat, or cure any disease.

HYDROGENYX Flask

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Up to ~9,000 ppb of dissolved molecular hydrogen (manufacturer's data), verifiable at home with a DPD test. 400 ml, touch screen, wireless charging base included.

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The HYDROGENYX Flask is a water preparation device, not a medical device. It does not prevent, treat, or cure any disease.