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1: Adv Ther. 2005
Nov-Dec;22(6):659-78. |
Hyperbaric
oxygen in the treatment of patients with cerebral stroke, brain trauma, and
neurologic disease.
Al-Waili NS, Butler GJ, Beale J, Abdullah MS, Hamilton RW, Lee BY, Lucus P, Allen MW, Petrillo RL, Carrey Z, Finkelstein M.
Life Support Technologies, Inc., and NewTechnologies, Inc., The Mount Vernon
Hospital, Westchester Medical Center, New York Medical College, New York, USA.
Hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy has been used to treat patients with numerous
disorders, including stroke. This treatment has been shown to decrease cerebral
edema, normalize water content in the brain, decrease the severity of brain
infarction, and maintain blood-brain barrier integrity. In addition, HBO
therapy attenuates motor deficits, decreases the risks of sequelae, and
prevents recurrent cerebral circulatory disorders, thereby leading to improved
outcomes and survival. Hyperbaric oxygen also accelerates the regression of
atherosclerotic lesions, promotes antioxidant defenses, and suppresses the
proliferation of macrophages and foam cells in atherosclerotic lesions.
Although no medical treatment is available for patients with cerebral palsy, in
some studies, HBO therapy has improved the function of damaged cells,
attenuated the effects of hypoxia on the neonatal brain, enhanced gross motor
function and fine motor control, and alleviated spasticity. In the treatment of
patients with migraine, HBO therapy has been shown to reduce intracranial
pressure significantly and abort acute attacks of migraine, reduce migraine
headache pain, and prevent cluster headache.
In studies that investigated the effects of HBO
therapy on the damaged brain, the treatment was found to inhibit neuronal
death, arrest the progression of radiation-induced neurologic necrosis, improve
blood flow in regions affected by chronic neurologic disease as well as aerobic
metabolism in brain injury, and accelerate the resolution of clinical symptoms.
Hyperbaric oxygen has also been reported to accelerate neurologic recovery
after spinal cord injury by ameliorating mitochondrial dysfunction in the motor
cortex and spinal cord, arresting the spread of hemorrhage, reversing hypoxia,
and reducing edema. HBO has enhanced wound healing in patients with chronic
osteomyelitis. The results of HBO therapy in the treatment of patients with
stroke, atherosclerosis, cerebral palsy, intracranial pressure, headache, and
brain and spinal cord injury are promising and warrant further investigation.