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Re: Brain-injured dogs can get HBOT

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,

The title of toadies post states brain-injued dogs can get HBOT, This

morning at 0715 I received an urgent call to allow a dog, injured by Carbon

Monoxide

to use our Secrist Chamber. This was a call from 2 staff members of the

largest Veterinarian Surgical Hospital in Virginia. I was hoping your post

would tell me where I can recommend, what HBOT Hospital I can recommend to

Veterinarians with animals needing HBOT. Do you have such a list? Manson

Where can pet owners take their pets?

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we have a pet chamber and treat animals ( NOT at our center!!)

I dont know of any out your way, I hope that they at least gave the dog 02?

send them my e-mail I will try to help

Re: [ ] Brain-injured dogs can get HBOT

,

The title of toadies post states brain-injued dogs can get HBOT, This

morning at 0715 I received an urgent call to allow a dog, injured by Carbon

Monoxide

to use our Secrist Chamber. This was a call from 2 staff members of the

largest Veterinarian Surgical Hospital in Virginia. I was hoping your post

would tell me where I can recommend, what HBOT Hospital I can recommend to

Veterinarians with animals needing HBOT. Do you have such a list?

Manson

Where can pet owners take their pets?

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Share on other sites

I have successfully treated a brain injured Standard Poodle with

hyperbarics. He is a show dog that was pulled from the show circuit

because he was getting progressively worse. After 30 treatments he's

back showing again and on his way to his Championship.

Here is the contact info for a Vet on the east coast that has a

chamber in his clinic.

Dysert DVM

Animal Hyperbarics

Fort Lauderdale, FL 33310-5383

(954)777-0003

(954)714-3800

Jacque

> we have a pet chamber and treat animals ( NOT at our center!!)

> I dont know of any out your way, I hope that they at least gave

the dog 02?

> send them my e-mail I will try to help

>

>

> Re: [ ] Brain-injured dogs can get HBOT

>

>

>

> ,

>

> The title of toadies post states brain-injued dogs can get HBOT,

This

> morning at 0715 I received an urgent call to allow a dog, injured

by Carbon

> Monoxide

> to use our Secrist Chamber. This was a call from 2 staff members

of the

> largest Veterinarian Surgical Hospital in Virginia. I was hoping

your post

> would tell me where I can recommend, what HBOT Hospital I can

recommend to

> Veterinarians with animals needing HBOT. Do you have such a

list?

> Manson

> Where can pet owners take their pets?

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

We put our old dog in our chamber.

We just wanted to keep her for one more summer. It worked but she had

cancer in her leg. X-rays showed she had no bone left. So we let her go.

However, her vet couldn't believe she made it that long.

I also pulled the end of the tail off my daughter's gerbil. It was fine

until I washed it off causing it to bleed. The gerbil was so bad it

couldn't get it's head off the floor. It started running in circles

dragging it's head. I rushed it to the chamber and brought it and myself

down to 16 feet. I put it in a hood, held the neck hole closed and treated

it for 20 minutes. Within 1 minute it was holding it's head up. It is

doing fine today.

Just imagine if we treated people immediately after injuries.

Love to all,

Rose

[ ] Brain-injured dogs can get HBOT

>

> From http://www.acarc.com/pageserver/hbot.asp?section=hbot

>

> Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy

>

> This exciting treatment modality, new to veterinary medicine, is

> well-recognized as an indispensable treatment in human hospitals and

> specialized wound-care centers.

>

> Clinical evidence in randomized trials in veterinary and human

> medicine has demonstrated the usefulness of hyperbaric oxygen.

>

> The basic effect of HBOT is an increase in oxygen in the blood. Under

> the circumstance of HBOT, where the plasma is capable of carrying

> enough oxygen to meet the needs of the body's tissues, the oxygen

> acts as a drug and can be useful in treating a number of disease

> processes.

>

> Hyperbaric oxygen therapy applications

>

>

> Heart pathology

>

> * Pulmonary heart failure

> * Pulmonary edema

>

> Gastrointestinal

>

> * Normalization of intestinal function following surgery

> * Pancreatitis

> * Hepatitis

>

> Oncological pathology

>

> * Osteoradionecrosis

> * Post-radiation head and neck surgery

> * Angiogenesis in radiation-damaged tissue

>

> Neurological

>

> * Nerve or spinal cord injury

> * Head trauma

>

> Selected other applications

>

> * Diabetes mellitus

> * Edema (swelling)

> * Burns

> * Skin grafts

> * Chronic or non-healing wounds

> * Crush injury

> * Wound healing

>

>

> --

>

>

> Freels

> 2948 Windfield Circle

> Tucker, GA 30084-6714

> 770-491-6776 (phone)

> 720-234-5757 (fax)

> mailto:dfreels@...

>

> http://www.freelanceforum.org/df

>

>

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