Guest guest Posted April 10, 2006 Report Share Posted April 10, 2006 *Long, but compelling article on hbot in the UK. Lucinda ********************************************** Why is a remarkable treatment being denied to thousands of desperate patients? Grice reports http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS & grid=P8 & xml=/health/20\ 06/04/10/hoxygen10.xml * Waddington is as limp as a sleeping child in his father's arms. But he is not asleep and there is something disturbing about this kind of floppiness. His head is lolling and swinging. His limbs seem weak and uncontrolled. Ten years ago, during a routine 10-minute operation to correct an undescended testicle, was deprived of oxygen. The medical accident, known euphemistically as " acquired brain injury " , left him with a condition resembling cerebral palsy. Now he is 13, a handsome boy who communicates by moving his heavy head in a semi-circle - right for yes, left for no, and subtle gradations in between, on a scale of one to 10. " How was school today, ? " his mother, , asks him. His head sweeps round three-quarters of the arc towards the right. " I see, seven out of 10. " " He may appear to be a terrible case, " says, " but if you had seen him before you'd realise just how far he has come. He could not see. He could not understand. He cried all day. We spent all our time trying to alleviate his distress. " We were told he would probably only ever recognise me as a 'familiar smell'. Doctors said there was no hope; to put him in a home, to have another child. " spent 21 months at Alder Hey Hospital's brain injury unit in Liverpool. Then the Waddingtons heard about a children's naturopathic clinic in Lancaster, close to their home, run by former nurse and midwife Jane Dean. In desperation, they took him to see her. " 's body was curved like a banana, " recalls Dean. " He had no control over any of his muscles and was being fed through a tube. He was on 16 different kinds of medication. There was no cognition at all. " He had that high-pitched 'cerebral' cry that, once you have heard, you hope never to hear again in your life. My heart went out to him. I thought, 'Surely there must be more we can do.' " Dean had recently watched a television programme about the remarkable healing powers of oxygen administered under pressure, known as hyperbaric oxygen treatment (HBOT). She decided to see if it would help . She rented a hyperbaric oxygen chamber and had it installed on an industrial estate in Lancaster. For six months, was treated there three to five times a week. He has now been receiving HBOT for eight years and his improvement, say his parents, is little short of miraculous. " Before the treatment, his body was tight all the time, " says . " His understanding came back very quickly. To begin with, he couldn't see. But now he can read, his maths is good and he can tell the time. He is starting to be able to squeeze a switch, which could open up a new form of communication. We take him to football matches and to horse-riding for the disabled. He remembers everything. He will never walk, but we have our child back. I believe in my heart that if he had gone into a hyperbaric oxygen chamber as soon as the accident happened, he would probably have been OK. " Doctors might be more circumspect, perhaps, but access to HBOT for at the time of his accident would have been as unlikely then as it is now for thousands of people who could benefit from it. Most doctors are unaware of the therapeutic potential of oxygen because they are not taught about it as medical students. However, research shows that not only can it reverse potentially fatal conditions, such as radiation tissue damage, carbon-monoxide poisoning, gas gangrene and necrosis (when tissue dies following infection), it is also effective for wounds that fail to heal and a wide range of other conditions, including multiple sclerosis. Oxygen is crucial to tissue repair, but its delivery is often impaired by damage to blood vessels. Breathing high levels under hyperbaric conditions (increased atmospheric pressure) raises the amount of dissolved oxygen in the circulation - so more reaches the tissues. The Daily Telegraph recently highlighted the case of Norris <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/main.jhtml?xml=/health/2006/03/06/hnorris06.x\ ml>, 16, who suffered a massive radiation overdose during treatment for a brain tumour. Her symptoms included a severely burned scalp, which healed after several sessions in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber. Following that article - which mentioned HBOT's therapeutic applications - many desperate people contacted us, wanting to know where their nearest unit was. The news is not good: oxygen chambers cost about £50,000 and most of the 75 hyperbaric centres in Britain are run by charities, principally for MS sufferers. A few are privately run, mostly for the victims of diving accidents, but there are only five NHS units. " It is ironic that the most powerful intervention in medicine is being used by lay people in the community,'' says Prof Philip , Britain's leading expert in HBOT, who is based at the University of Dundee. Part of the problem, according to Jane Dean, is that HBOT is considered " alternative " and people are scared of going against their doctor or consultant's advice. Dean, who, following her experience with Waddington, founded the Breath for Life charity to provide HBOT, says charities such as hers face other problems. " Our centre is very small, yet it is unjustly classified as an independent private hospital with specialist technology. It is run by volunteers and has only one paid member of staff, yet we are being asked by the Healthcare Commission [the independent health inspection organisation] to pay the same annual inspection fee - £1,500 - as commercially run centres.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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