24 Healthcare Innovations Specialist clinics Breathe deep
From anti-ageing properties to fighting bacteria and healing wounds fast, the purported benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy are impressive and wide-ranging, but are they true? We speak to an expert to find out. Words: Becky Barnes
decompression sickness after returning to the surface too quickly. But the treatment is now available in private health and aesthetic clinics around the world, with a long list of benefits promised. During treatment, patients spend
H
up to 90 minutes in an enclosed chamber containing pure oxygen in air that’s at two or three times normal atmospheric pressure. Tis means they breathe in much more oxygen than they would normally. According to Te Mayo Clinic: “When your blood carries this extra oxygen throughout your body, this helps to fight bacteria and stimulate the release of substances called growth factors and stem cells, which promote healing.”
Benefits of HBOT According to Te Mayo Clinic, HBOT can help treat serious infections or wounds that may not heal as a result of diabetes or radiation injury, as well as severe anaemia, brain abscesses, burns, crushing injuries, gangrene, skin infections and sudden sight loss. Researchers in the US are looking into whether HBOT could help other
yperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) was traditionally used to treat scuba divers who’d experienced
conditions, including stroke, chronic fatigue, spinal cord injury, PTSD, inflammatory bowel diseases and sports injuries. Te use of HBOT in sport is already widespread. Te Wales football team, for example, reportedly uses HBOT to help reduce recovery times and treat injuries. So far, research on the treatment
is inconclusive. Hassan Murad, a hyperbaric medicine physician at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, says: “None of these indications are supported by high-quality studies. Tey should be considered experimental.” Tere have even been claims in a
study by Tel Aviv University and the Shamir Medical Center, both in Israel, that HBOT can reverse the ageing process among healthy adults, which is why it’s often cited as an anti-ageing skincare treatment. But, sadly, this relates to the ageing of blood cells rather than making us look younger.
Where to find treatment Currently, HBOT is only available on the NHS for decompression illness and or arterial gas embolism (an air bubble in the blood). So if you’re looking to reap any of the other purported benefits you’ll have to go private, and it certainly won’t come cheap.
According to Oxygen Healing,
a UK-wide clinic providing HBOT, treatments can require up to 40 sessions setting you back £200 a go. You’ll even find HBOT in some skincare and aesthetic clinics, including London’s BelleCell for £160. Hassan adds: “Some of the chronic
conditions require daily treatments for several weeks.”
What are the risks? Te rather long list of possible side effects is somewhat off-putting. Tese include ear pain or injury, temporary myopia (short-sightedness) or eye lens changes, lung collapse, lowered blood sugar (a high risk for people with diabetes), seizures (among those with a pre-existing history). What’s more, some patients with heart failure can get worse after multiple treatments. “People who have chronic ear
problems may have difficulty in clearing their ears and may need tubes placed in their ears to tolerate treatment, which is not common but can happen,” explains Hassan. “And we have to be careful with patients who have a history of seizures or heart failure and treat them only when we think the benefits outweigh the risk, a process called shared- decision making.”
Promotional Content • Saturday 3 July 2021
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy chamber PHOTOGRAPH: GETTY
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