News & Research
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy has been used for the better part of two centuries. Search our arhives below for past HBOT news and research or scroll down for the latest.
The Latest HBOT News & Research
Erythropoietin in patients with traumatic brain injury and extracranial injury-A post hoc analysis of the erythropoietin traumatic brain injury trial.
Abstract: Erythropoietin (EPO) may reduce mortality after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Secondary brain injury is exacerbated by multiple trauma, and possibly modifiable by EPO. We hypothesized that EPO decreases mortality more in TBI patients with...
Molecular characteristics of multifocal invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma of the lung: Report of a rare case.
Abstract: Invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma (IMA) is an uncommon entity in the lung, with a poor prognosis. Multifocal IMA of the lung is even more unusual, and there is little experience with effective treatments. Herein, we present a case of...
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for Wound Dehiscence After Intraoral Bone Grafting in the Nonirradiated Patient: A Case Series.
Abstract: In maxillofacial surgery, hyperbaric oxygen treatment is used almost exclusively as adjunctive therapy for osteoradionecrosis of the mandible in irradiated patients. It also is used to prevent the occurrence of osteoradionecrosis in the...
Management of the Chronic Burn Wound.
Abstract: This article reviews the current evidence in using hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) in burn wounds. There is also separate consideration of diabetic foot burns and a protocol for use of HBOT in a specific case. The challenges of using...
Management of the Chronic Burn Wound.
Abstract: This article reviews the current evidence in using hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) in burn wounds. There is also separate consideration of diabetic foot burns and a protocol for use of HBOT in a specific case. The challenges of using...
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for the Treatment of Diabetic Foot Ulcers: A Health Technology Assessment.
Abstract: About 15% to 25% of people with diabetes will develop a foot ulcer. These wounds are often resistant to healing; therefore, people with diabetes experience lower limb amputation at about 20 times the rate of people without diabetes. If an...
Subcellular Energetics and Metabolism: Potential Therapeutic Applications.
Abstract: Part I of this review discussed the similarities between embryogenesis, mammalian adaptions to hypoxia (primarily driven by hypoxia-inducible factor-1 [HIF-1]), ischemia-reperfusion injury (and its relationship with reactive oxygen...
HOPON (Hyperbaric Oxygen for the Prevention of Osteoradionecrosis): a randomised controlled trial of hyperbaric oxygen to prevent osteoradionecrosis of the irradiated mandible: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
Abstract: Osteoradionecrosis of the mandible is the most common serious complication of radiotherapy for head and neck malignancy. For decades, hyperbaric oxygen has been employed in efforts to prevent those cases of osteoradionecrosis that are...
Clinical Trial – Dexmedetomidine and Laparoscopic Surgery
Conventionally General anaesthesia remains the choice for the majority of open abdominal
surgical procedures, and regional anaesthesia is preferred only for patients who are at high
risk under general anaesthesia . The main reason for selecting spinal anaesthesia as the
first choice for laparoscopic cases was its advantages over general anaesthesia which include
uniform total muscle relaxation, a conscious patient, economical, relatively uneventful
recovery, pain free early postoperative period and the protection from potential
complications of general anaesthesia. The main debatable point, however, seems to be the
status of respiratory parameters among the two modes of anaesthesia during laparoscopic
surgery. In this context it can be stated that spontaneous physiological respiration during
spinal anaesthesia would always be better than an assisted respiration as in general
anaesthesia.
The pneumo-peritoneum induced rise in intra-abdominal pressure including pressure on the
diaphragm and carbon dioxide induced peritoneal irritation are the factors to be considered
