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A new study just published on Feb 2011 in the journal of cancer makes a strong argument for applying hyperbaric oxygenation therapy (HBOT) for those patients who have had either surgery or radiation therapy for brain tumors. The study followed patients who had been treated with HBOT and there was a marked improvement in cognitive [...]

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New Study–Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for Degenerative Discs

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is a used to treat difficult wounds in many cutting-edge hospitals and wound centers mainly due to it’s ability to promote growth of new tissue and blood vessels. Researchers have now taken this further to see if the healing effects of oxygen can also be shown for the intervertebral discs. This is a debilitating condition for a wide range of the population and are seen in more as people age and also for those who have suffered physical trauma to the area (ie, contact sports or accidents and falls). The following study shows us the mechanism involved in hyperbaric oxygen’s application for treating degenerative discs. Since this treatment modality is non-invasive, it should now get considerable attention for an adjunct treatment modality for disc degeneration.

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New study–Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for Degenerative Disc Disease

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

The Journal of Orthopaedic Research just published on article demonstrating the beneficial effects of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy on human degenerated intervertebral disks. During the course of the study, the researchers were able to evaluate physiological changes associated with regeneration of tissue, thus proposing various methods of action.

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New study–Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for Femoral Head Necrosis

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

The University of South Florida has just shown us that the application of HBOT caused significant pain relief in just 20 treatments. In addition, range of motion was also significantly improved; the difference being that 20 to 30 sessions were needed to obtain this positive response.  This study was a double-blind randomized, controlled, prospective study and the positive results were confirmed by MRI reports. More importantly, the 7 year follow up revealed that all patients remained substantially pain and none required hip arthroplasty.

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Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Reduces Diabetes Onset!!!

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

Under the Microscope

DRI researchers are testing the effects of hyperbaric oxygen on the recovery and regeneration of islet function

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Reduces Diabetes Onset

DRI researchers report hyperbaric oxgen therapy (HOT) prevented the onset of autoimmune diabetes in nearly 50 percent of mice involved in a recent study compared to mice not receiving HOT.

HOT has been used for decades to deliver pressurized oxygen to scuba divers who suffer complications after being underwater. It is a remarkably simple, non-invasive therapy with virtually no side-effects that is showing early signs of promise in diabetes research. In research studies conducted by DRI scientists, non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice that received hyperbaric oxygen therapy were 50 percent less likely to develop autoimmune diabetes than those without HOT. NOD mice are an ideal experimental model; they develop type 1 diabetes spontaneously and share many of the characteristics of type 1 diabetes in humans. The study data showed such potential that our researchers presented the findings to the 69th Scientific Sessions meeting in New Orleans. The characteristics of HOT make it a suitable candidate for further exploration of its possible clinical applications. Clinical trials are currently underway at the Diabetes Research Institute where patients are being given a combination of oxygen treatments along with infusions of their own bone-marrow derived stem cells. The hope is that the combined treatments will cause the pancreas to either recover or function well enough to allow patients to significantly decrease or stop their medications. Similar trials will take place in Europe, Asia and Latin America as part of the collaborative efforts of the DRI Federation

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Hyperbaric Oxygen Treats A Variety of Conditions

Monday, August 18th, 2008

Hyperbaric treatments said to cure, help treat a myriad of ills

08-03-2007 06:07; by Rebecca L. Sandlin

Mark Merrell was at his wits’ end. His young daughter, Maddie, was diagnosed as profoundly autistic. “We tried a number of therapies and been to a number of different places, and my kid’s pretty sick, and you accept that, and there’s just nothing anybody can do for her,” Merrell explained. “So we basically had to become our own advocates.” After investigating alternative therapies for his child, Merrell wound up in Florida, where he learned that hyperbaric medicine is being used to treat autism. “Many people like myself who are all right here in this Fishers-Carmel-Zionsville area, many of our doctors are not in Indiana,” he said. “Our backs are against the wall. We need help, and we can’t wait another six months for this study or another year for that drug. We need help now.” After using the hyperbaric chamber about 4 to 5 days per week, Merrell said the results of the treatments on Maddie have been astounding. “We can go out in public with our daughter now and nobody notices us … nobody looks at us. The change has been amazing,” he said. Merrell believes in the treatments so much he not only installed a hyperbaric chamber in his home, but also left his job as a police officer to open Oxyspa, a salon located at 11559 Cumberland Road in Fishers that features hyperbaric oxygen treatments. Oxsyspa is one a few locations in the Midwest that offers the treatments, using an FDA-approved hyperbaric chamber. When hyperbaric chambers were first installed in some Indianapolis-area hospitals, they were mainly used for treating burn victims or those who had carbon monoxide poisoning. Hospital chambers use a much greater pressure than what can be found at Oxyspa, but Merrell said the lighter pressure, non-invasive and non-pharmaceutical treatments are beginning to come into their own as an alternative therapy. David Darbro, M.D., the medical director who provides medical oversight at Oxyspa, became a believer in hyperbaric treatments after he changed roles and became a patient when he suffered a stroke three years ago. The stroke affected his speech. “You would not have been able to have understood me, were we speaking three years ago,” he said. Darbro drew a picture of a hyperbaric chamber to get his wishes across. After undergoing the pressurized oxygen treatments, he no longer takes medications and has no difficulty communicating. It just made sense, that when you check people’s oxygen, especially with chronic degenerative disorders, they seem to be low on oxygen and didn’t have any energy,” he said. Darbro said mild hyperbaric therapy is indicated in treatments of several illnesses and conditions, including migraine, heart problems and diabetes. It is also used to treat wounds, sports injuries, osteomyelitis, skin grafts, traumatic brain injury, cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis. Darbro, who specializes in holistic medicine, said the treatments benefit the patient by helping to increase the body’s ability to absorb oxygen. “Your breathing is the key to opening the door to energy,” he said. “The idea of pressurized oxygen – putting oxygen under pressure – is the key, because it’s putting more oxygen in the fluid – the plasma – in between the red blood cells.” There are only 13 FDA-approved uses of hyperbaric treatments, so insurance may not cover treatments for other medical conditions. Articles of studies and other findings about the treatments have appeared in the Journal of American Medical Association. One article, published in 1990, calls hyperbaric treatments a controversial therapy. Another article, published in 2004, suggests hyperbaric oxygen therapy improves survival and limb salvage of patients with necrotizing soft tissue infections. A session at Oxyspa costs $80 for a treatment lasting around an hour, with packages available. A doctor’s prescription or order is mandatory before a client can begin therapy. Merrell said physicians from several disciplines including neurologists have referred their patients to the spa for treatments. He added the spa also follows FDA regulations by charting each client’s progress and condition during treatment. Cindy Beuoy, of Indianapolis, has been using the chamber since February and has noticed some benefits from regular visits. “I try to stay as healthy as I can. I’m a real pro-active person on health,” she said. “I found that, using the chamber, it helps me to sleep better. I exercise – I do strength training exercise three times a week and it helps my muscles recover faster from the exercise. I just feel my overall vitality is greater.”

Hyperbaric Oxygen Revolutionizing Medicine

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy revolutionizing medical field

April 6th 2008 Gino Troiani

Hyperbaric oxygen treatment (HBOT) is the medical use of pure oxygen at higher than atmospheric pressure. Its concept is simple. Increased pressure enables higher amounts of oxygen to enter the blood stream, therefore, jumpstarting the healing process. Red blood cells are the most common type of blood cell in the human body. They are responsible for delivering oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body via the blood stream. In many cases, increased oxygen can be key to many recovery processes. According to Michael Neumeister, M.D. in an article published in 2005, the first hyperbaric chambers date back to the late 1600s. These chambers were used in the treatment of ailments such as inflammations, scurvy, arthritis, and rickets, but due to a lack of technology, minimal effectiveness was recorded. Still, throughout the years, many scientists kept playing with the idea, hoping one day for a medical breakthrough. That breakthrough came in the early 1900s when Dr. Orville Cunningham discovered that patients with cardio vascular disorders improved significantly when moved to lower altitudes with denser air. With this finding, Cunningham took it upon himself to design a modern electric hyperbaric chamber, standing eight feet in diameter and thirty feet long. Cunningham used his chamber to treat multiple patients who suffered from the Spanish flu, and experienced tremendous results. However, because of the great depression in the 1930s, he was no longer able to continue his research. In the 1970s, similar chambers were designed and used by the armed forces to treat many diving and decompression illnesses such as the bends and caisson disease, suffered by Navy and Air force soldiers.  Today these illnesses only represent three percent of all of the total uses for HBOT. In the last 35 years, curiosity has led many doctors and scientists to conducted experiments on the effectiveness of hyperbaric therapy. Many studies have proven to show significant recovery increases in head injuries, myasthenia gravis, myocardial infarction, free skin grafts, sudden deafness, burns, glaucoma, leg ulcers, heart attacks, strokes, cerebral palsy, and carbon monoxide poisoning. HBOT is also commonly used to help treat autism

New Hyperbaric Center Opens with Focus on Chronic Health Conditions

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Hyperbaric therapy coming to Austin

Monday, March 31, 2008

Someday soon, Haelen Hyperbarics will reach across the nation and its hyperbaric oxygen therapy will be an everyday part of the nation’s health care, if the management’s vision comes true.  The Hilton Head Island, S.C.-based company already has its hyperbaric chambers set up at two island health-care centers. The company plans to open centers in Austin; Raleigh, N.C.; West Palm Beach, Fla.; Savannah, Ga.; and Memphis, Tenn., by the end of the year, said Andrew Kolb, company president.  A hyperbaric chamber is an airtight chamber that patients lie in for about an hour, breathing pure oxygen in a pressurized atmosphere. The extra oxygen helps speed recovery on everything from broken bones to neurological disorders, Kolb said.  Hospitals also have the chambers, but they are used typically for only a few things covered by insurance, such as wound recovery or tissue damage from radiation. At Haelen’s Hilton Head locations, services are elective, meaning they’re not covered by insurance and patients pay out of pocket. Popular reasons for using the facilities include treatment for chronic pain from conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, sports injuries and recovery from cosmetic surgery, Kolb said.

Study–Hyperbaric oxygen for Severe Acute Pancreatitis

Friday, January 18th, 2008

Hyperbaric oxygen improves capillary morphology in severe acute pancreatitis.

Pancreas. 2008 Jan

Cuthbertson CM, Su KH, Muralidharan V, Millar I, Malcontenti-Wilson C, Christophi C.

Department of Surgery, Austin Health, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia.

OBJECTIVES: This article aims to determine the effect of acute pancreatitis on microvascular morphology and the impact of treatment with hyperbaric oxygen (HBO). METHODS: Sixty-seven male Wistar rats were induced with acute pancreatitis by retrograde bile duct injection. Rats were randomized to 12-hourly HBO or control treatment. Two rats in each group were killed at baseline and 24, 48, and 72 hours postinduction, and a cast of the pancreatic microvasculature was examined using scanning electron microscopy. RESULTS: Normal pancreatic vasculature is a dense network with a consistent capillary diameter. In acute pancreatitis, mean capillary diameter is increased at 24 hours (P < 0.001) and further increased at 48 hours (P = 0.007). From 24 hours, diameter heterogeneity is increased (P < 0.001) and capillary density is reduced (P < 0.001). Hyperbaric oxygen has a significant effect on vascular morphology changes from 48 hours after induction. Capillary diameter and heterogeneity of diameter are decreased by HBO (both P < 0.001). Capillary density is increased by HBO at 48 and 72 hours (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: In acute pancreatitis, structural capillary diameter and heterogeneity of diameter increase and capillary density decreases. These parameters are all improved by HBO treatment. Hyperbaric oxygen treatment normalizes the pancreatic microvasculature after acute pancreatitis and may be a potentially effective treatment of this disease.

Study–Hyperbaric oxygen therapy reduces Pain & Inflammation

Thursday, August 16th, 2007

Hyperbaric Oxygen Treatment Is Comparable to Acetylsalicylic Acid Treatment in an Animal Model of Arthritis.

J Pain. 2007 Aug 7;

Wilson HD, Toepfer VE, Senapati AK, Wilson JR, Fuchs PN.

Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas.

Approximately 1 in 5 adults in the United States are affected by the pain, disability, and decreased quality of life associated with arthritis. The primary focus of treatment is on reducing joint inflammation and pain through a variety of pharmacotherapies, each of which is associated with various side effects. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is an alternative treatment that has been recommended to treat a variety of inflammatory diseases, ranging from chronic brain injury to exercise induced muscle soreness. The purpose of this set of experiments was to explore the effect of hyperbaric oxygen therapy on joint inflammation and mechanical hyperalgesia in an animal model of arthritis, and compare these effects to treatment with aspirin. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy significantly reduced both joint inflammation and hyperalgesia. As compared with aspirin treatment, hyperbaric treatment was equally as effective in decreasing joint inflammation and hyperalgesia. PERSPECTIVE: This article reports that hyperbaric oxygen treatment decreases pain and inflammation in an animal model of arthritis. The effect of hyperbaric oxygen treatment is very similar in magnitude to the effect of acetylsalicylic acid treatment. Potentially, hyperbaric oxygen could be used to treat pain and inflammation in patients with arthritis.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy reduces severity and improves survival in severe acute pancreatitis.

Thursday, August 16th, 2007

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy reduces severity and improves survival in severe acute pancreatitis.

J Gastrointest Surg. 2007 Aug;11(8):1008-15.

Nikfarjam M, Cuthbertson CM, Malcontenti-Wilson C, Muralidharan V, Millar I, Christophi C.

Department of Surgery, University of Melbourne, Austin Hospital, Lance Townsend Building Level 8, Studley Rd, Heidelberg, Melbourne, Victoria, 3084, Australia. surgery-armc@unimelb.edu.au

Severe acute pancreatitis is characterized by pancreatic necrosis, resulting in local and systemic inflammation. Hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy modulates inflammation, but has not been extensively studied in pancreatitis. This study investigates the effects of HBO in a rat model of severe acute pancreatitis. Sixty-four rats were induced with severe pancreatitis using 4% sodium taurocholate and randomized to HBO treatment or control. HBO was commenced 6 h after induction (100% oxygen at 2.5 atmospheres for 90 min) and continued every 12 h for a maximum of eight treatment episodes. Surviving animals were killed at 7 days. Severity of pancreatitis was graded macroscopically and microscopically. Lung edema was calculated using wet and dry lung weights. Macroscopic and microscopic severity scores (mean +/- SE) of HBO-treated animals with pancreatitis (8.3 +/- 0.7; 9.6 +/- 0.4) were lower than those of controls (10.5 +/- 0.5; 11.1 +/- 0.4) (p = 0.02 and p = 0.03, respectively). The HBO-treated group had reduced pancreatic necrosis compared to controls (40 +/- 4% vs. 54 +/- 4%; p = 0.003). There was no difference in pulmonary edema between the groups. Median survival in the HBO-treatment group was 51 h, compared to 26 h in controls. Day-7 survival was significantly improved in the HBO-treated animals compared to controls (40% vs. 27%; p = 0.04). HBO therapy reduces overall severity, decreases the extent of necrosis, and improves survival in severe acute pancreatitis.