Guest guest Posted July 1, 2001 Report Share Posted July 1, 2001 , Thank you for making that clear to me. It wasn't before. Several of us thought you were talking about Wayne. You have a precious dream and you want to protect it. God Bless you for your good work and good heart! And, I understand everything you say about maintaining an aura of professionalism in your field. But, some bozo winning this week's Darwin award does not reflect on anyone other than the winner. I don't see this as a threat to either HBOT or the type of " legitimate " operation you are running. If anything, it seems to me an argument for your side of the issue: " See? We need freestanding HBOT centers where people can get the treatment they insist on, and have a right to. If this man had had access to reasonably priced HBOT, he might be alive today! " jim Rapid Recovery Hyperbarics wrote: > > again, He did not check the level of oxygen in his tank, HE reduced the > level of atmosphere with in his " Hypobaric " chamber, then he ran out of > oxygen, ( he most likely had the oxygen delivered by a mask) and > suffocated,) Had he been trained, he would have checked his tank before he > took the last dive in the tank. Training helps it can save life's, > this poor man loss his life because of his Lack of training and his wife > left the room, Had she been there the entire time she could have let him out > and he would be alive today. > I am sorry he lost his life, I am sorry that it may hurt the field of HBOT > in the long run. the entire accident could have been befited completely had > he looked at the level of oxygen with in his tank, How do I prevent this > from happening? I have a monitor on my tanks that tells me when the tanks > get below 50 PSI, and I have back up tanks that switch over in that event, I > check my level of oxygen all day long, this law that says I must do things > this way is a GOOD law and I will abide by it. IT saves life's. > > > Re: Re: HBOT- > > > > > > Hello All, > > Here is story on someone who made 49 chamber runs....but... > > died... but... it shows what can be done and what can go wrong! > > > > If you want better info on Hyperbaric info this is page > > where story is: > > > > http://www.hyperbaric-forum.com/ubb/Forum34/HTML/000036.html > > > > Thanks > > Mike Slivinski > > > > > > > > Deadly hyperbaric chamber to be examined - thestar.com > > WELLAND - A coroner's jury will get a chance today to examine an > > antiquated hyperbaric chamber that turned into a death trap for a man > > obsessed with alternative medicines. > > The jurors will be taken from the Welland courthouse to a storage > > facility outside the city where the make-shift device is being kept. > > The 60-year-old boiler-like chamber - which is made of heavy-gauge > > steel > > and weighs 1,600 pounds - is the centrepiece of a coroner's inquest > > probing the death of 36-year-old Skala. > > Skala was conducting a hypobaric (low pressure) treatment for his > > persistent headaches when he suffocated inside the chamber on Jan. > > 31, > > 2000. > > His self-styled experiment involved purging all the ambient air from > > the > > chamber and sucking pure oxygen through a tube from a cylinder > > outside > > the tank. > > With conventional hyperbaric treatment, however, the air pressure > > inside > > the tank is increased. > > Originally developed to treat divers suffering from the ''bends,'' > > hyperbaric chambers are now used in hospitals to treat conditions > > including carbon monoxide poisoning, cyanide poisoning, and severe > > burns. > > The jury heard that Skala had purchased the chamber from retired > > Grimsby > > businessman Arthur Bray for $1,500 in the summer of 1999 and > > installed it > > in the kitchen of his home. > > After his death, police found an elaborate system of gauges, tubes, > > and > > other devices including an air purifier, vacuum pump and compressor > > hooked up to the white cylinder. > > When he went inside for a session, his common-law wife would fasten > > the > > door with a number of heavy bolts and monitor the treatment through > > two > > small portholes on the hatch. > > There was also a porthole on the top that allowed Skala to see the > > gauges > > on the oxygen tank. > > He would bang on the chamber or give her hand signals if the wanted > > her > > to change the air pressure. > > Once inside the chamber, there was no way for him to open the hatch > > and > > get out on his own. > > He had conducted 49 sessions - which he recorded in his diary - at > > the > > time of his death. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-25-2001 05:33 PM > > > > Search for headache cure proved deadly - hamiltonspectator.com > > Clairmont The Hamilton Spectator > > Skala said if the 60-year-old jerry-rigged hyperbaric chamber > > he > > bought for $1,500 wouldn't stop his headaches, he was " going to die > > trying " to find a cure. > > Then on Jan. 31, 2000, he slid inside the 2.7-metre-long, > > shoulder-wide > > cylinder wedged between the fridge and stove in his Fonthill kitchen. > > And, just like she had done 48 times before, his pregnant common-law > > wife > > Lorrie Welsh used a power tool to securely bolt shut the air-tight > > steel > > hatch. She turned a dial that fed oxygen into her husband's mask, > > started > > a vacuum that sucked the rest of the air out of the chamber, waited > > for > > his 'thumbs-up' signal, then went into the living room to read a > > book to > > her four-year-old son. > > Twenty minutes later Skala suffocated to death. > > A coroner's inquest began yesterday in Welland to look at the > > circumstances of the 32-year-old's death and to make recommendations > > about the use of hyperbaric chambers outside hospital settings. It is > > Ontario's first inquest into hyperbaric chambers. > > Originally designed by the military to stabilize deep-sea divers > > suffering from the bends, hyperbaric chambers have for years been > > used by > > specially trained physicians at hospitals to treat a narrow range of > > acute conditions. These include thermal burns, problem wounds, > > decompression sickness, crush injuries and flesh-eating disease. > > But in recent years, private clinics have expanded the use of the > > chambers to include treatment of acquired brain injuries, multiple > > sclerosis, cerebral palsy and other disabilities. > > Those treatments are controversial. > > Private clinics are unregulated in Ontario and the established > > medical > > community says there is no proof hyperbaric chambers will help any of > > those conditions. > > In fact, many doctors warn against using the chambers outside a > > hospital > > because they are too dangerous. > > Skala was always desperately searching for new ways to ease the > > headaches > > that plagued him. They began after he seriously injured his neck in > > a car > > accident when he was 19. > > " He said his mind was full of cobwebs, " Welsh testified. " A constant > > pressure in the middle of his head that he couldn't reach. The only > > time > > it changed was when it got worse. " > > A believer in homeopathic medicine, Skala had tried vitamins and > > herbs to > > quell the headaches. In fact, Welsh told the five-member jury, they > > met > > more than five years ago at a herbal remedies workshop. > > But Skala never liked to follow the recommendations of naturopaths. > > " He was an extremist, " Welsh testified. " If one (pill) was supposed > > to > > work, he'd try five. Sometimes he'd take 15 ... He'd say, 'If I > > don't get > > healthy, I'm going to die trying.' " > > When his brother was involved in an accident, Skala became > > interested in > > hyperbaric therapy treatment. He talked to a naturopath in St. > > Catharines > > about it and began researching it on the Internet. He phoned a > > clinic in > > Florida that offers the therapy and tried to phone government > > offices in > > Ontario " to find out who was in charge of hyperbaric chambers, " Welsh > > told the court. " He just got passed from one ministry to another. " > > Then he bought a used chamber from a former military diver in > > Grimsby. > > Skala took the tank to his parent's farm where he worked. He tinkered > > with it for seven months. > > Then he installed the 720-kilogram tank in his kitchen. > > " We put it over a support beam so it wouldn't crash through the > > floor, " > > Welsh says. > > In August 1999, Skala -- an avid scuba diver -- made his first > > " dive. " > > That's the term used for a hyperbaric session. Pure oxygen, at > > triple the > > outside air pressure, is pumped into the sealed container. The oxygen > > fills the blood and flows into parts of the body that have been > > deprived > > of oxygen. The extra oxygen is believed to help restore cell growth. > > Skala's " dives " would last anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. He > > would > > sometimes do up to five in a day. He'd lie down on a piece of plywood > > inside the chamber. Welsh did the rest. > > " I would close the door and I would seal the bolts ... It scared me > > because I didn't understand it. " > > She told the jury she relied on her husband to give her instructions. > > Sometimes, while inside the chamber, he'd write orders and press them > > against the porthole glass. Other times he'd just use hand signals to > > indicate he needed more or less oxygen. > > " He just seemed to know, " said Welsh, who added that he had wanted to > > take a 10-day hyperbaric chamber course in Florida. > > Skala took 35 dives between August 1999 and January 2000. > > He believed the dives gave him energy. But they did nothing for his > > headaches. > > So he took a gamble. > > A skydiver as well as a scuba diver, Skala liked the way his brain > > felt > > when he was in the air. The altitude seemed to clear the pain that > > was so > > persistent. > > So using some equipment he bought from a medical supplier, he turned > > his > > hyperbaric chamber into a hypobaric chamber. Instead of simulating > > the > > pressure of being below sea level, he wanted to replicate the > > feeling of > > being at a great height. Using a vacuum, he sucked all of the air > > out of > > the chamber, leaving himself to rely completely on an oxygen mask > > for air > > supplied by a tank outside the chamber. > > Thirteen times he tried hypobaric therapy and complained it didn't > > help > > his headaches either. > > On the fourteenth time, he died. > > Dr. Chitra Rao, a Hamilton pathologist who performed the autopsy, > > testified that hypobaric chamber therapy wouldn't have made Skala > > feel > > better. > > " It increases intercranial pressure. That's going to aggravate the > > headache. " > > In fact, said Rao, no medical treatments at all use hypobaric > > therapy. > > Welsh told the jury she still believes in the treatments her husband > > was > > giving himself in the chamber. > > " The chambers work, " she said. " You just shouldn't have one in your > > kitchen. " > > Clairmont's commentary appears regularly in The Spectator. You > > can > > contact her by e-mail at sclairmont@... or by > > telephone > > at 905-526-3539. > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-26-2001 08:28 AM > > > > Private hyperbaric chambers legal, inquest told - thestar.com > > WELLAND - There is nothing to stop people from building a hyperbaric > > chamber like the one that killed a southern Ontario man in an > > ill-fated > > medical experiment, a coroner's inquest heard yesterday. > > Despite strict controls in clinical settings, there are no > > regulations > > governing the construction or use of hyperbaric chambers in private > > homes. > > Even if there were strict laws against private use, medical experts > > told > > a coroner's inquest yesterday they probably wouldn't have prevented > > the > > death of Skala. > > On Jan. 31, last year, Skala suffocated in an antiquated diving > > chamber > > he had installed in the kitchen of his home. He was using the device > > to > > self-administer high- and low-pressure treatments for chronic > > headaches. > > He had explored a whole range of conventional and alternative medical > > cures before buying the boiler-like vessel from a Grimsby, Ont., > > businessman. > > Dr. McLeod, associate registrar of the College of Physicians > > and > > Surgeons of Ontario, believes it would take more than strict laws to > > stop > > another desperate person from building his or her death trap. > > McLeod suggested an absolute ban on home-made chambers would only > > drive > > the problem further underground. > > ''At the end of the day, if an individual wants to do his own thing, > > it > > can be very difficult to stop them,'' he told the inquest. ''If > > somebody > > really wants something, they will find other ways of getting it,'' he > > said. > > Instead of a ban, McLeod suggested a study group to explore the > > risks and > > medical benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy. > > He agreed, however, that hyperbaric chambers - which use pure oxygen > > - > > are too dangerous for private home because of the risk of explosions > > and > > fires. > > Leckie, a medical devices inspector for Health Canada, > > testified hyperbaric chambers can be used to treat only 13 medical > > conditions in Canada, including severe burns, gangrene, decompression > > sickness, flesh eating disease, and common monoxide poisoning. > > There are about 30 chambers in clinics across Canada and an unknown > > number in private homes. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > All times are ET (US) > > next newest topic | next oldest topic > > Administrative Options: Close Topic | Archive/Move | Delete Topic > > > > Hop to: > > > > Contact Us | Hyperbaric-Forum.com > > Powered by Infopop www.infopop.com © 2000 > > Ultimate Bulletin Board 5.45c > > Hyperbaric Information Resource: Click Here > > We would like to thank everyone who have been sending testimonies, > > letters, research papers, photos, etc. for the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project. Your efforts are changing peoples lives for the better! > > Global Hyperbaric Resource Project was recently founded to create a > > searchable centralized public source of Hyperbaric Information and > > Patient Testimonies on the Internet. Some Hyperbaric Web sites go > > off-line or get buried at the bottom of the search engines and > > valuable > > information is lost or never found. With the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project we are asking everyone to use www.hyperbaric-forum.com as a > > staging ground to build a unified location to refer people for > > Hyperbaric > > Information. Many volunteers have been adding their information to > > the > > database and including a link in that information back to their web > > site. > > Until now Hyperbaric Information has been loosely scattered across > > the > > internet with not enough in one location for a potential patient to > > come > > to an educated decision about Hyperbaric Therapy. The Global > > Hyperbaric > > Resource Project hopes to change this and will be a great benefit to > > anyone considering Hyperbaric Therapy. > > > > On Fri, 29 Jun 2001 03:11:27 -0000 naturalhealthway@... > > writes: > > > said,> Wayne, Are you out of your mind? > > > My Dear , > > > I've noticed many of your replies seem to have the angle of pushing > > > your HBOT facility and promoting your " expert skills " . > > > Someone with engineering and technical abilities like being able to > > > weld airtight seams and pressure test vessels could make an HBOT if > > > they really put their mind to it. It doesn't need to have all the > > > bells and whistles of professional chamber. One could make a > > > chamber > > > out of a large propane tank. It is already made to sustain the > > > pressure. Apparently your capabilities don't allow you to imagine > > > how > > > someone might go about this. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Re: HBOT > > > > > > > > > > > > > Evening Dr. Saul and the list, > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >But I though that you posted previously that there were HBOT > > > chambers > > > > sold > > > > > >for $40,000. Not yours, but other ones. > > > > > > > > > > No doubt others have thought of the question I have. > > > > > > > > > > Surely a super craftsman with determination could build a home > > > system from > > > > > junk he can find here and there to result if a fully functional > > > HBOT > > > > system. > > > > > > > > > > I have an eight by 10 walk in cooler that is virtually air > > > tight. It > > > > could > > > > > be sealed with any material imaginable. > > > > > > > > > > Getting the door to be pressure tight would be the only > > problem. > > > > > > Maybe we > > > > > could swipe the hatch off a submarine or similar. > > > > > > > > > > I am into control systems, at one time manufactured medical > > > products, > > > > > designed manifolds and valves. I could certainly build a fully > > > computer > > > > > controlled system for the HBOT. > > > > > > > > > > Tell me I am crazy.... if you think so. <grin> > > > > > > > > > > Wayne > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2001 Report Share Posted July 1, 2001 , Thank you for making that clear to me. It wasn't before. Several of us thought you were talking about Wayne. You have a precious dream and you want to protect it. God Bless you for your good work and good heart! And, I understand everything you say about maintaining an aura of professionalism in your field. But, some bozo winning this week's Darwin award does not reflect on anyone other than the winner. I don't see this as a threat to either HBOT or the type of " legitimate " operation you are running. If anything, it seems to me an argument for your side of the issue: " See? We need freestanding HBOT centers where people can get the treatment they insist on, and have a right to. If this man had had access to reasonably priced HBOT, he might be alive today! " jim Rapid Recovery Hyperbarics wrote: > > again, He did not check the level of oxygen in his tank, HE reduced the > level of atmosphere with in his " Hypobaric " chamber, then he ran out of > oxygen, ( he most likely had the oxygen delivered by a mask) and > suffocated,) Had he been trained, he would have checked his tank before he > took the last dive in the tank. Training helps it can save life's, > this poor man loss his life because of his Lack of training and his wife > left the room, Had she been there the entire time she could have let him out > and he would be alive today. > I am sorry he lost his life, I am sorry that it may hurt the field of HBOT > in the long run. the entire accident could have been befited completely had > he looked at the level of oxygen with in his tank, How do I prevent this > from happening? I have a monitor on my tanks that tells me when the tanks > get below 50 PSI, and I have back up tanks that switch over in that event, I > check my level of oxygen all day long, this law that says I must do things > this way is a GOOD law and I will abide by it. IT saves life's. > > > Re: Re: HBOT- > > > > > > Hello All, > > Here is story on someone who made 49 chamber runs....but... > > died... but... it shows what can be done and what can go wrong! > > > > If you want better info on Hyperbaric info this is page > > where story is: > > > > http://www.hyperbaric-forum.com/ubb/Forum34/HTML/000036.html > > > > Thanks > > Mike Slivinski > > > > > > > > Deadly hyperbaric chamber to be examined - thestar.com > > WELLAND - A coroner's jury will get a chance today to examine an > > antiquated hyperbaric chamber that turned into a death trap for a man > > obsessed with alternative medicines. > > The jurors will be taken from the Welland courthouse to a storage > > facility outside the city where the make-shift device is being kept. > > The 60-year-old boiler-like chamber - which is made of heavy-gauge > > steel > > and weighs 1,600 pounds - is the centrepiece of a coroner's inquest > > probing the death of 36-year-old Skala. > > Skala was conducting a hypobaric (low pressure) treatment for his > > persistent headaches when he suffocated inside the chamber on Jan. > > 31, > > 2000. > > His self-styled experiment involved purging all the ambient air from > > the > > chamber and sucking pure oxygen through a tube from a cylinder > > outside > > the tank. > > With conventional hyperbaric treatment, however, the air pressure > > inside > > the tank is increased. > > Originally developed to treat divers suffering from the ''bends,'' > > hyperbaric chambers are now used in hospitals to treat conditions > > including carbon monoxide poisoning, cyanide poisoning, and severe > > burns. > > The jury heard that Skala had purchased the chamber from retired > > Grimsby > > businessman Arthur Bray for $1,500 in the summer of 1999 and > > installed it > > in the kitchen of his home. > > After his death, police found an elaborate system of gauges, tubes, > > and > > other devices including an air purifier, vacuum pump and compressor > > hooked up to the white cylinder. > > When he went inside for a session, his common-law wife would fasten > > the > > door with a number of heavy bolts and monitor the treatment through > > two > > small portholes on the hatch. > > There was also a porthole on the top that allowed Skala to see the > > gauges > > on the oxygen tank. > > He would bang on the chamber or give her hand signals if the wanted > > her > > to change the air pressure. > > Once inside the chamber, there was no way for him to open the hatch > > and > > get out on his own. > > He had conducted 49 sessions - which he recorded in his diary - at > > the > > time of his death. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-25-2001 05:33 PM > > > > Search for headache cure proved deadly - hamiltonspectator.com > > Clairmont The Hamilton Spectator > > Skala said if the 60-year-old jerry-rigged hyperbaric chamber > > he > > bought for $1,500 wouldn't stop his headaches, he was " going to die > > trying " to find a cure. > > Then on Jan. 31, 2000, he slid inside the 2.7-metre-long, > > shoulder-wide > > cylinder wedged between the fridge and stove in his Fonthill kitchen. > > And, just like she had done 48 times before, his pregnant common-law > > wife > > Lorrie Welsh used a power tool to securely bolt shut the air-tight > > steel > > hatch. She turned a dial that fed oxygen into her husband's mask, > > started > > a vacuum that sucked the rest of the air out of the chamber, waited > > for > > his 'thumbs-up' signal, then went into the living room to read a > > book to > > her four-year-old son. > > Twenty minutes later Skala suffocated to death. > > A coroner's inquest began yesterday in Welland to look at the > > circumstances of the 32-year-old's death and to make recommendations > > about the use of hyperbaric chambers outside hospital settings. It is > > Ontario's first inquest into hyperbaric chambers. > > Originally designed by the military to stabilize deep-sea divers > > suffering from the bends, hyperbaric chambers have for years been > > used by > > specially trained physicians at hospitals to treat a narrow range of > > acute conditions. These include thermal burns, problem wounds, > > decompression sickness, crush injuries and flesh-eating disease. > > But in recent years, private clinics have expanded the use of the > > chambers to include treatment of acquired brain injuries, multiple > > sclerosis, cerebral palsy and other disabilities. > > Those treatments are controversial. > > Private clinics are unregulated in Ontario and the established > > medical > > community says there is no proof hyperbaric chambers will help any of > > those conditions. > > In fact, many doctors warn against using the chambers outside a > > hospital > > because they are too dangerous. > > Skala was always desperately searching for new ways to ease the > > headaches > > that plagued him. They began after he seriously injured his neck in > > a car > > accident when he was 19. > > " He said his mind was full of cobwebs, " Welsh testified. " A constant > > pressure in the middle of his head that he couldn't reach. The only > > time > > it changed was when it got worse. " > > A believer in homeopathic medicine, Skala had tried vitamins and > > herbs to > > quell the headaches. In fact, Welsh told the five-member jury, they > > met > > more than five years ago at a herbal remedies workshop. > > But Skala never liked to follow the recommendations of naturopaths. > > " He was an extremist, " Welsh testified. " If one (pill) was supposed > > to > > work, he'd try five. Sometimes he'd take 15 ... He'd say, 'If I > > don't get > > healthy, I'm going to die trying.' " > > When his brother was involved in an accident, Skala became > > interested in > > hyperbaric therapy treatment. He talked to a naturopath in St. > > Catharines > > about it and began researching it on the Internet. He phoned a > > clinic in > > Florida that offers the therapy and tried to phone government > > offices in > > Ontario " to find out who was in charge of hyperbaric chambers, " Welsh > > told the court. " He just got passed from one ministry to another. " > > Then he bought a used chamber from a former military diver in > > Grimsby. > > Skala took the tank to his parent's farm where he worked. He tinkered > > with it for seven months. > > Then he installed the 720-kilogram tank in his kitchen. > > " We put it over a support beam so it wouldn't crash through the > > floor, " > > Welsh says. > > In August 1999, Skala -- an avid scuba diver -- made his first > > " dive. " > > That's the term used for a hyperbaric session. Pure oxygen, at > > triple the > > outside air pressure, is pumped into the sealed container. The oxygen > > fills the blood and flows into parts of the body that have been > > deprived > > of oxygen. The extra oxygen is believed to help restore cell growth. > > Skala's " dives " would last anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. He > > would > > sometimes do up to five in a day. He'd lie down on a piece of plywood > > inside the chamber. Welsh did the rest. > > " I would close the door and I would seal the bolts ... It scared me > > because I didn't understand it. " > > She told the jury she relied on her husband to give her instructions. > > Sometimes, while inside the chamber, he'd write orders and press them > > against the porthole glass. Other times he'd just use hand signals to > > indicate he needed more or less oxygen. > > " He just seemed to know, " said Welsh, who added that he had wanted to > > take a 10-day hyperbaric chamber course in Florida. > > Skala took 35 dives between August 1999 and January 2000. > > He believed the dives gave him energy. But they did nothing for his > > headaches. > > So he took a gamble. > > A skydiver as well as a scuba diver, Skala liked the way his brain > > felt > > when he was in the air. The altitude seemed to clear the pain that > > was so > > persistent. > > So using some equipment he bought from a medical supplier, he turned > > his > > hyperbaric chamber into a hypobaric chamber. Instead of simulating > > the > > pressure of being below sea level, he wanted to replicate the > > feeling of > > being at a great height. Using a vacuum, he sucked all of the air > > out of > > the chamber, leaving himself to rely completely on an oxygen mask > > for air > > supplied by a tank outside the chamber. > > Thirteen times he tried hypobaric therapy and complained it didn't > > help > > his headaches either. > > On the fourteenth time, he died. > > Dr. Chitra Rao, a Hamilton pathologist who performed the autopsy, > > testified that hypobaric chamber therapy wouldn't have made Skala > > feel > > better. > > " It increases intercranial pressure. That's going to aggravate the > > headache. " > > In fact, said Rao, no medical treatments at all use hypobaric > > therapy. > > Welsh told the jury she still believes in the treatments her husband > > was > > giving himself in the chamber. > > " The chambers work, " she said. " You just shouldn't have one in your > > kitchen. " > > Clairmont's commentary appears regularly in The Spectator. You > > can > > contact her by e-mail at sclairmont@... or by > > telephone > > at 905-526-3539. > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-26-2001 08:28 AM > > > > Private hyperbaric chambers legal, inquest told - thestar.com > > WELLAND - There is nothing to stop people from building a hyperbaric > > chamber like the one that killed a southern Ontario man in an > > ill-fated > > medical experiment, a coroner's inquest heard yesterday. > > Despite strict controls in clinical settings, there are no > > regulations > > governing the construction or use of hyperbaric chambers in private > > homes. > > Even if there were strict laws against private use, medical experts > > told > > a coroner's inquest yesterday they probably wouldn't have prevented > > the > > death of Skala. > > On Jan. 31, last year, Skala suffocated in an antiquated diving > > chamber > > he had installed in the kitchen of his home. He was using the device > > to > > self-administer high- and low-pressure treatments for chronic > > headaches. > > He had explored a whole range of conventional and alternative medical > > cures before buying the boiler-like vessel from a Grimsby, Ont., > > businessman. > > Dr. McLeod, associate registrar of the College of Physicians > > and > > Surgeons of Ontario, believes it would take more than strict laws to > > stop > > another desperate person from building his or her death trap. > > McLeod suggested an absolute ban on home-made chambers would only > > drive > > the problem further underground. > > ''At the end of the day, if an individual wants to do his own thing, > > it > > can be very difficult to stop them,'' he told the inquest. ''If > > somebody > > really wants something, they will find other ways of getting it,'' he > > said. > > Instead of a ban, McLeod suggested a study group to explore the > > risks and > > medical benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy. > > He agreed, however, that hyperbaric chambers - which use pure oxygen > > - > > are too dangerous for private home because of the risk of explosions > > and > > fires. > > Leckie, a medical devices inspector for Health Canada, > > testified hyperbaric chambers can be used to treat only 13 medical > > conditions in Canada, including severe burns, gangrene, decompression > > sickness, flesh eating disease, and common monoxide poisoning. > > There are about 30 chambers in clinics across Canada and an unknown > > number in private homes. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > All times are ET (US) > > next newest topic | next oldest topic > > Administrative Options: Close Topic | Archive/Move | Delete Topic > > > > Hop to: > > > > Contact Us | Hyperbaric-Forum.com > > Powered by Infopop www.infopop.com © 2000 > > Ultimate Bulletin Board 5.45c > > Hyperbaric Information Resource: Click Here > > We would like to thank everyone who have been sending testimonies, > > letters, research papers, photos, etc. for the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project. Your efforts are changing peoples lives for the better! > > Global Hyperbaric Resource Project was recently founded to create a > > searchable centralized public source of Hyperbaric Information and > > Patient Testimonies on the Internet. Some Hyperbaric Web sites go > > off-line or get buried at the bottom of the search engines and > > valuable > > information is lost or never found. With the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project we are asking everyone to use www.hyperbaric-forum.com as a > > staging ground to build a unified location to refer people for > > Hyperbaric > > Information. Many volunteers have been adding their information to > > the > > database and including a link in that information back to their web > > site. > > Until now Hyperbaric Information has been loosely scattered across > > the > > internet with not enough in one location for a potential patient to > > come > > to an educated decision about Hyperbaric Therapy. The Global > > Hyperbaric > > Resource Project hopes to change this and will be a great benefit to > > anyone considering Hyperbaric Therapy. > > > > On Fri, 29 Jun 2001 03:11:27 -0000 naturalhealthway@... > > writes: > > > said,> Wayne, Are you out of your mind? > > > My Dear , > > > I've noticed many of your replies seem to have the angle of pushing > > > your HBOT facility and promoting your " expert skills " . > > > Someone with engineering and technical abilities like being able to > > > weld airtight seams and pressure test vessels could make an HBOT if > > > they really put their mind to it. It doesn't need to have all the > > > bells and whistles of professional chamber. One could make a > > > chamber > > > out of a large propane tank. It is already made to sustain the > > > pressure. Apparently your capabilities don't allow you to imagine > > > how > > > someone might go about this. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Re: HBOT > > > > > > > > > > > > > Evening Dr. Saul and the list, > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >But I though that you posted previously that there were HBOT > > > chambers > > > > sold > > > > > >for $40,000. Not yours, but other ones. > > > > > > > > > > No doubt others have thought of the question I have. > > > > > > > > > > Surely a super craftsman with determination could build a home > > > system from > > > > > junk he can find here and there to result if a fully functional > > > HBOT > > > > system. > > > > > > > > > > I have an eight by 10 walk in cooler that is virtually air > > > tight. It > > > > could > > > > > be sealed with any material imaginable. > > > > > > > > > > Getting the door to be pressure tight would be the only > > problem. > > > > > > Maybe we > > > > > could swipe the hatch off a submarine or similar. > > > > > > > > > > I am into control systems, at one time manufactured medical > > > products, > > > > > designed manifolds and valves. I could certainly build a fully > > > computer > > > > > controlled system for the HBOT. > > > > > > > > > > Tell me I am crazy.... if you think so. <grin> > > > > > > > > > > Wayne > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2001 Report Share Posted July 1, 2001 I could see it was getting to be a mess and I hope I have cleared it up. Thanks for sending it , It was a big Relief to me, Re: Re: HBOT- > > > > > > Hello All, > > Here is story on someone who made 49 chamber runs....but... > > died... but... it shows what can be done and what can go wrong! > > > > If you want better info on Hyperbaric info this is page > > where story is: > > > > http://www.hyperbaric-forum.com/ubb/Forum34/HTML/000036.html > > > > Thanks > > Mike Slivinski > > > > > > > > Deadly hyperbaric chamber to be examined - thestar.com > > WELLAND - A coroner's jury will get a chance today to examine an > > antiquated hyperbaric chamber that turned into a death trap for a man > > obsessed with alternative medicines. > > The jurors will be taken from the Welland courthouse to a storage > > facility outside the city where the make-shift device is being kept. > > The 60-year-old boiler-like chamber - which is made of heavy-gauge > > steel > > and weighs 1,600 pounds - is the centrepiece of a coroner's inquest > > probing the death of 36-year-old Skala. > > Skala was conducting a hypobaric (low pressure) treatment for his > > persistent headaches when he suffocated inside the chamber on Jan. > > 31, > > 2000. > > His self-styled experiment involved purging all the ambient air from > > the > > chamber and sucking pure oxygen through a tube from a cylinder > > outside > > the tank. > > With conventional hyperbaric treatment, however, the air pressure > > inside > > the tank is increased. > > Originally developed to treat divers suffering from the ''bends,'' > > hyperbaric chambers are now used in hospitals to treat conditions > > including carbon monoxide poisoning, cyanide poisoning, and severe > > burns. > > The jury heard that Skala had purchased the chamber from retired > > Grimsby > > businessman Arthur Bray for $1,500 in the summer of 1999 and > > installed it > > in the kitchen of his home. > > After his death, police found an elaborate system of gauges, tubes, > > and > > other devices including an air purifier, vacuum pump and compressor > > hooked up to the white cylinder. > > When he went inside for a session, his common-law wife would fasten > > the > > door with a number of heavy bolts and monitor the treatment through > > two > > small portholes on the hatch. > > There was also a porthole on the top that allowed Skala to see the > > gauges > > on the oxygen tank. > > He would bang on the chamber or give her hand signals if the wanted > > her > > to change the air pressure. > > Once inside the chamber, there was no way for him to open the hatch > > and > > get out on his own. > > He had conducted 49 sessions - which he recorded in his diary - at > > the > > time of his death. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-25-2001 05:33 PM > > > > Search for headache cure proved deadly - hamiltonspectator.com > > Clairmont The Hamilton Spectator > > Skala said if the 60-year-old jerry-rigged hyperbaric chamber > > he > > bought for $1,500 wouldn't stop his headaches, he was " going to die > > trying " to find a cure. > > Then on Jan. 31, 2000, he slid inside the 2.7-metre-long, > > shoulder-wide > > cylinder wedged between the fridge and stove in his Fonthill kitchen. > > And, just like she had done 48 times before, his pregnant common-law > > wife > > Lorrie Welsh used a power tool to securely bolt shut the air-tight > > steel > > hatch. She turned a dial that fed oxygen into her husband's mask, > > started > > a vacuum that sucked the rest of the air out of the chamber, waited > > for > > his 'thumbs-up' signal, then went into the living room to read a > > book to > > her four-year-old son. > > Twenty minutes later Skala suffocated to death. > > A coroner's inquest began yesterday in Welland to look at the > > circumstances of the 32-year-old's death and to make recommendations > > about the use of hyperbaric chambers outside hospital settings. It is > > Ontario's first inquest into hyperbaric chambers. > > Originally designed by the military to stabilize deep-sea divers > > suffering from the bends, hyperbaric chambers have for years been > > used by > > specially trained physicians at hospitals to treat a narrow range of > > acute conditions. These include thermal burns, problem wounds, > > decompression sickness, crush injuries and flesh-eating disease. > > But in recent years, private clinics have expanded the use of the > > chambers to include treatment of acquired brain injuries, multiple > > sclerosis, cerebral palsy and other disabilities. > > Those treatments are controversial. > > Private clinics are unregulated in Ontario and the established > > medical > > community says there is no proof hyperbaric chambers will help any of > > those conditions. > > In fact, many doctors warn against using the chambers outside a > > hospital > > because they are too dangerous. > > Skala was always desperately searching for new ways to ease the > > headaches > > that plagued him. They began after he seriously injured his neck in > > a car > > accident when he was 19. > > " He said his mind was full of cobwebs, " Welsh testified. " A constant > > pressure in the middle of his head that he couldn't reach. The only > > time > > it changed was when it got worse. " > > A believer in homeopathic medicine, Skala had tried vitamins and > > herbs to > > quell the headaches. In fact, Welsh told the five-member jury, they > > met > > more than five years ago at a herbal remedies workshop. > > But Skala never liked to follow the recommendations of naturopaths. > > " He was an extremist, " Welsh testified. " If one (pill) was supposed > > to > > work, he'd try five. Sometimes he'd take 15 ... He'd say, 'If I > > don't get > > healthy, I'm going to die trying.' " > > When his brother was involved in an accident, Skala became > > interested in > > hyperbaric therapy treatment. He talked to a naturopath in St. > > Catharines > > about it and began researching it on the Internet. He phoned a > > clinic in > > Florida that offers the therapy and tried to phone government > > offices in > > Ontario " to find out who was in charge of hyperbaric chambers, " Welsh > > told the court. " He just got passed from one ministry to another. " > > Then he bought a used chamber from a former military diver in > > Grimsby. > > Skala took the tank to his parent's farm where he worked. He tinkered > > with it for seven months. > > Then he installed the 720-kilogram tank in his kitchen. > > " We put it over a support beam so it wouldn't crash through the > > floor, " > > Welsh says. > > In August 1999, Skala -- an avid scuba diver -- made his first > > " dive. " > > That's the term used for a hyperbaric session. Pure oxygen, at > > triple the > > outside air pressure, is pumped into the sealed container. The oxygen > > fills the blood and flows into parts of the body that have been > > deprived > > of oxygen. The extra oxygen is believed to help restore cell growth. > > Skala's " dives " would last anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. He > > would > > sometimes do up to five in a day. He'd lie down on a piece of plywood > > inside the chamber. Welsh did the rest. > > " I would close the door and I would seal the bolts ... It scared me > > because I didn't understand it. " > > She told the jury she relied on her husband to give her instructions. > > Sometimes, while inside the chamber, he'd write orders and press them > > against the porthole glass. Other times he'd just use hand signals to > > indicate he needed more or less oxygen. > > " He just seemed to know, " said Welsh, who added that he had wanted to > > take a 10-day hyperbaric chamber course in Florida. > > Skala took 35 dives between August 1999 and January 2000. > > He believed the dives gave him energy. But they did nothing for his > > headaches. > > So he took a gamble. > > A skydiver as well as a scuba diver, Skala liked the way his brain > > felt > > when he was in the air. The altitude seemed to clear the pain that > > was so > > persistent. > > So using some equipment he bought from a medical supplier, he turned > > his > > hyperbaric chamber into a hypobaric chamber. Instead of simulating > > the > > pressure of being below sea level, he wanted to replicate the > > feeling of > > being at a great height. Using a vacuum, he sucked all of the air > > out of > > the chamber, leaving himself to rely completely on an oxygen mask > > for air > > supplied by a tank outside the chamber. > > Thirteen times he tried hypobaric therapy and complained it didn't > > help > > his headaches either. > > On the fourteenth time, he died. > > Dr. Chitra Rao, a Hamilton pathologist who performed the autopsy, > > testified that hypobaric chamber therapy wouldn't have made Skala > > feel > > better. > > " It increases intercranial pressure. That's going to aggravate the > > headache. " > > In fact, said Rao, no medical treatments at all use hypobaric > > therapy. > > Welsh told the jury she still believes in the treatments her husband > > was > > giving himself in the chamber. > > " The chambers work, " she said. " You just shouldn't have one in your > > kitchen. " > > Clairmont's commentary appears regularly in The Spectator. You > > can > > contact her by e-mail at sclairmont@... or by > > telephone > > at 905-526-3539. > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-26-2001 08:28 AM > > > > Private hyperbaric chambers legal, inquest told - thestar.com > > WELLAND - There is nothing to stop people from building a hyperbaric > > chamber like the one that killed a southern Ontario man in an > > ill-fated > > medical experiment, a coroner's inquest heard yesterday. > > Despite strict controls in clinical settings, there are no > > regulations > > governing the construction or use of hyperbaric chambers in private > > homes. > > Even if there were strict laws against private use, medical experts > > told > > a coroner's inquest yesterday they probably wouldn't have prevented > > the > > death of Skala. > > On Jan. 31, last year, Skala suffocated in an antiquated diving > > chamber > > he had installed in the kitchen of his home. He was using the device > > to > > self-administer high- and low-pressure treatments for chronic > > headaches. > > He had explored a whole range of conventional and alternative medical > > cures before buying the boiler-like vessel from a Grimsby, Ont., > > businessman. > > Dr. McLeod, associate registrar of the College of Physicians > > and > > Surgeons of Ontario, believes it would take more than strict laws to > > stop > > another desperate person from building his or her death trap. > > McLeod suggested an absolute ban on home-made chambers would only > > drive > > the problem further underground. > > ''At the end of the day, if an individual wants to do his own thing, > > it > > can be very difficult to stop them,'' he told the inquest. ''If > > somebody > > really wants something, they will find other ways of getting it,'' he > > said. > > Instead of a ban, McLeod suggested a study group to explore the > > risks and > > medical benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy. > > He agreed, however, that hyperbaric chambers - which use pure oxygen > > - > > are too dangerous for private home because of the risk of explosions > > and > > fires. > > Leckie, a medical devices inspector for Health Canada, > > testified hyperbaric chambers can be used to treat only 13 medical > > conditions in Canada, including severe burns, gangrene, decompression > > sickness, flesh eating disease, and common monoxide poisoning. > > There are about 30 chambers in clinics across Canada and an unknown > > number in private homes. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > All times are ET (US) > > next newest topic | next oldest topic > > Administrative Options: Close Topic | Archive/Move | Delete Topic > > > > Hop to: > > > > Contact Us | Hyperbaric-Forum.com > > Powered by Infopop www.infopop.com © 2000 > > Ultimate Bulletin Board 5.45c > > Hyperbaric Information Resource: Click Here > > We would like to thank everyone who have been sending testimonies, > > letters, research papers, photos, etc. for the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project. Your efforts are changing peoples lives for the better! > > Global Hyperbaric Resource Project was recently founded to create a > > searchable centralized public source of Hyperbaric Information and > > Patient Testimonies on the Internet. Some Hyperbaric Web sites go > > off-line or get buried at the bottom of the search engines and > > valuable > > information is lost or never found. With the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project we are asking everyone to use www.hyperbaric-forum.com as a > > staging ground to build a unified location to refer people for > > Hyperbaric > > Information. Many volunteers have been adding their information to > > the > > database and including a link in that information back to their web > > site. > > Until now Hyperbaric Information has been loosely scattered across > > the > > internet with not enough in one location for a potential patient to > > come > > to an educated decision about Hyperbaric Therapy. The Global > > Hyperbaric > > Resource Project hopes to change this and will be a great benefit to > > anyone considering Hyperbaric Therapy. > > > > On Fri, 29 Jun 2001 03:11:27 -0000 naturalhealthway@... > > writes: > > > said,> Wayne, Are you out of your mind? > > > My Dear , > > > I've noticed many of your replies seem to have the angle of pushing > > > your HBOT facility and promoting your " expert skills " . > > > Someone with engineering and technical abilities like being able to > > > weld airtight seams and pressure test vessels could make an HBOT if > > > they really put their mind to it. It doesn't need to have all the > > > bells and whistles of professional chamber. One could make a > > > chamber > > > out of a large propane tank. It is already made to sustain the > > > pressure. Apparently your capabilities don't allow you to imagine > > > how > > > someone might go about this. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Re: HBOT > > > > > > > > > > > > > Evening Dr. Saul and the list, > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >But I though that you posted previously that there were HBOT > > > chambers > > > > sold > > > > > >for $40,000. Not yours, but other ones. > > > > > > > > > > No doubt others have thought of the question I have. > > > > > > > > > > Surely a super craftsman with determination could build a home > > > system from > > > > > junk he can find here and there to result if a fully functional > > > HBOT > > > > system. > > > > > > > > > > I have an eight by 10 walk in cooler that is virtually air > > > tight. It > > > > could > > > > > be sealed with any material imaginable. > > > > > > > > > > Getting the door to be pressure tight would be the only > > problem. > > > > > > Maybe we > > > > > could swipe the hatch off a submarine or similar. > > > > > > > > > > I am into control systems, at one time manufactured medical > > > products, > > > > > designed manifolds and valves. I could certainly build a fully > > > computer > > > > > controlled system for the HBOT. > > > > > > > > > > Tell me I am crazy.... if you think so. <grin> > > > > > > > > > > Wayne > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2001 Report Share Posted July 1, 2001 I could see it was getting to be a mess and I hope I have cleared it up. Thanks for sending it , It was a big Relief to me, Re: Re: HBOT- > > > > > > Hello All, > > Here is story on someone who made 49 chamber runs....but... > > died... but... it shows what can be done and what can go wrong! > > > > If you want better info on Hyperbaric info this is page > > where story is: > > > > http://www.hyperbaric-forum.com/ubb/Forum34/HTML/000036.html > > > > Thanks > > Mike Slivinski > > > > > > > > Deadly hyperbaric chamber to be examined - thestar.com > > WELLAND - A coroner's jury will get a chance today to examine an > > antiquated hyperbaric chamber that turned into a death trap for a man > > obsessed with alternative medicines. > > The jurors will be taken from the Welland courthouse to a storage > > facility outside the city where the make-shift device is being kept. > > The 60-year-old boiler-like chamber - which is made of heavy-gauge > > steel > > and weighs 1,600 pounds - is the centrepiece of a coroner's inquest > > probing the death of 36-year-old Skala. > > Skala was conducting a hypobaric (low pressure) treatment for his > > persistent headaches when he suffocated inside the chamber on Jan. > > 31, > > 2000. > > His self-styled experiment involved purging all the ambient air from > > the > > chamber and sucking pure oxygen through a tube from a cylinder > > outside > > the tank. > > With conventional hyperbaric treatment, however, the air pressure > > inside > > the tank is increased. > > Originally developed to treat divers suffering from the ''bends,'' > > hyperbaric chambers are now used in hospitals to treat conditions > > including carbon monoxide poisoning, cyanide poisoning, and severe > > burns. > > The jury heard that Skala had purchased the chamber from retired > > Grimsby > > businessman Arthur Bray for $1,500 in the summer of 1999 and > > installed it > > in the kitchen of his home. > > After his death, police found an elaborate system of gauges, tubes, > > and > > other devices including an air purifier, vacuum pump and compressor > > hooked up to the white cylinder. > > When he went inside for a session, his common-law wife would fasten > > the > > door with a number of heavy bolts and monitor the treatment through > > two > > small portholes on the hatch. > > There was also a porthole on the top that allowed Skala to see the > > gauges > > on the oxygen tank. > > He would bang on the chamber or give her hand signals if the wanted > > her > > to change the air pressure. > > Once inside the chamber, there was no way for him to open the hatch > > and > > get out on his own. > > He had conducted 49 sessions - which he recorded in his diary - at > > the > > time of his death. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-25-2001 05:33 PM > > > > Search for headache cure proved deadly - hamiltonspectator.com > > Clairmont The Hamilton Spectator > > Skala said if the 60-year-old jerry-rigged hyperbaric chamber > > he > > bought for $1,500 wouldn't stop his headaches, he was " going to die > > trying " to find a cure. > > Then on Jan. 31, 2000, he slid inside the 2.7-metre-long, > > shoulder-wide > > cylinder wedged between the fridge and stove in his Fonthill kitchen. > > And, just like she had done 48 times before, his pregnant common-law > > wife > > Lorrie Welsh used a power tool to securely bolt shut the air-tight > > steel > > hatch. She turned a dial that fed oxygen into her husband's mask, > > started > > a vacuum that sucked the rest of the air out of the chamber, waited > > for > > his 'thumbs-up' signal, then went into the living room to read a > > book to > > her four-year-old son. > > Twenty minutes later Skala suffocated to death. > > A coroner's inquest began yesterday in Welland to look at the > > circumstances of the 32-year-old's death and to make recommendations > > about the use of hyperbaric chambers outside hospital settings. It is > > Ontario's first inquest into hyperbaric chambers. > > Originally designed by the military to stabilize deep-sea divers > > suffering from the bends, hyperbaric chambers have for years been > > used by > > specially trained physicians at hospitals to treat a narrow range of > > acute conditions. These include thermal burns, problem wounds, > > decompression sickness, crush injuries and flesh-eating disease. > > But in recent years, private clinics have expanded the use of the > > chambers to include treatment of acquired brain injuries, multiple > > sclerosis, cerebral palsy and other disabilities. > > Those treatments are controversial. > > Private clinics are unregulated in Ontario and the established > > medical > > community says there is no proof hyperbaric chambers will help any of > > those conditions. > > In fact, many doctors warn against using the chambers outside a > > hospital > > because they are too dangerous. > > Skala was always desperately searching for new ways to ease the > > headaches > > that plagued him. They began after he seriously injured his neck in > > a car > > accident when he was 19. > > " He said his mind was full of cobwebs, " Welsh testified. " A constant > > pressure in the middle of his head that he couldn't reach. The only > > time > > it changed was when it got worse. " > > A believer in homeopathic medicine, Skala had tried vitamins and > > herbs to > > quell the headaches. In fact, Welsh told the five-member jury, they > > met > > more than five years ago at a herbal remedies workshop. > > But Skala never liked to follow the recommendations of naturopaths. > > " He was an extremist, " Welsh testified. " If one (pill) was supposed > > to > > work, he'd try five. Sometimes he'd take 15 ... He'd say, 'If I > > don't get > > healthy, I'm going to die trying.' " > > When his brother was involved in an accident, Skala became > > interested in > > hyperbaric therapy treatment. He talked to a naturopath in St. > > Catharines > > about it and began researching it on the Internet. He phoned a > > clinic in > > Florida that offers the therapy and tried to phone government > > offices in > > Ontario " to find out who was in charge of hyperbaric chambers, " Welsh > > told the court. " He just got passed from one ministry to another. " > > Then he bought a used chamber from a former military diver in > > Grimsby. > > Skala took the tank to his parent's farm where he worked. He tinkered > > with it for seven months. > > Then he installed the 720-kilogram tank in his kitchen. > > " We put it over a support beam so it wouldn't crash through the > > floor, " > > Welsh says. > > In August 1999, Skala -- an avid scuba diver -- made his first > > " dive. " > > That's the term used for a hyperbaric session. Pure oxygen, at > > triple the > > outside air pressure, is pumped into the sealed container. The oxygen > > fills the blood and flows into parts of the body that have been > > deprived > > of oxygen. The extra oxygen is believed to help restore cell growth. > > Skala's " dives " would last anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. He > > would > > sometimes do up to five in a day. He'd lie down on a piece of plywood > > inside the chamber. Welsh did the rest. > > " I would close the door and I would seal the bolts ... It scared me > > because I didn't understand it. " > > She told the jury she relied on her husband to give her instructions. > > Sometimes, while inside the chamber, he'd write orders and press them > > against the porthole glass. Other times he'd just use hand signals to > > indicate he needed more or less oxygen. > > " He just seemed to know, " said Welsh, who added that he had wanted to > > take a 10-day hyperbaric chamber course in Florida. > > Skala took 35 dives between August 1999 and January 2000. > > He believed the dives gave him energy. But they did nothing for his > > headaches. > > So he took a gamble. > > A skydiver as well as a scuba diver, Skala liked the way his brain > > felt > > when he was in the air. The altitude seemed to clear the pain that > > was so > > persistent. > > So using some equipment he bought from a medical supplier, he turned > > his > > hyperbaric chamber into a hypobaric chamber. Instead of simulating > > the > > pressure of being below sea level, he wanted to replicate the > > feeling of > > being at a great height. Using a vacuum, he sucked all of the air > > out of > > the chamber, leaving himself to rely completely on an oxygen mask > > for air > > supplied by a tank outside the chamber. > > Thirteen times he tried hypobaric therapy and complained it didn't > > help > > his headaches either. > > On the fourteenth time, he died. > > Dr. Chitra Rao, a Hamilton pathologist who performed the autopsy, > > testified that hypobaric chamber therapy wouldn't have made Skala > > feel > > better. > > " It increases intercranial pressure. That's going to aggravate the > > headache. " > > In fact, said Rao, no medical treatments at all use hypobaric > > therapy. > > Welsh told the jury she still believes in the treatments her husband > > was > > giving himself in the chamber. > > " The chambers work, " she said. " You just shouldn't have one in your > > kitchen. " > > Clairmont's commentary appears regularly in The Spectator. You > > can > > contact her by e-mail at sclairmont@... or by > > telephone > > at 905-526-3539. > > IP: Logged > > Admin5 > > Administrator > > > > Posts: 121 > > From:n/a > > Registered: > > > > posted 04-26-2001 08:28 AM > > > > Private hyperbaric chambers legal, inquest told - thestar.com > > WELLAND - There is nothing to stop people from building a hyperbaric > > chamber like the one that killed a southern Ontario man in an > > ill-fated > > medical experiment, a coroner's inquest heard yesterday. > > Despite strict controls in clinical settings, there are no > > regulations > > governing the construction or use of hyperbaric chambers in private > > homes. > > Even if there were strict laws against private use, medical experts > > told > > a coroner's inquest yesterday they probably wouldn't have prevented > > the > > death of Skala. > > On Jan. 31, last year, Skala suffocated in an antiquated diving > > chamber > > he had installed in the kitchen of his home. He was using the device > > to > > self-administer high- and low-pressure treatments for chronic > > headaches. > > He had explored a whole range of conventional and alternative medical > > cures before buying the boiler-like vessel from a Grimsby, Ont., > > businessman. > > Dr. McLeod, associate registrar of the College of Physicians > > and > > Surgeons of Ontario, believes it would take more than strict laws to > > stop > > another desperate person from building his or her death trap. > > McLeod suggested an absolute ban on home-made chambers would only > > drive > > the problem further underground. > > ''At the end of the day, if an individual wants to do his own thing, > > it > > can be very difficult to stop them,'' he told the inquest. ''If > > somebody > > really wants something, they will find other ways of getting it,'' he > > said. > > Instead of a ban, McLeod suggested a study group to explore the > > risks and > > medical benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy. > > He agreed, however, that hyperbaric chambers - which use pure oxygen > > - > > are too dangerous for private home because of the risk of explosions > > and > > fires. > > Leckie, a medical devices inspector for Health Canada, > > testified hyperbaric chambers can be used to treat only 13 medical > > conditions in Canada, including severe burns, gangrene, decompression > > sickness, flesh eating disease, and common monoxide poisoning. > > There are about 30 chambers in clinics across Canada and an unknown > > number in private homes. > > Torstar News Service > > IP: Logged > > All times are ET (US) > > next newest topic | next oldest topic > > Administrative Options: Close Topic | Archive/Move | Delete Topic > > > > Hop to: > > > > Contact Us | Hyperbaric-Forum.com > > Powered by Infopop www.infopop.com © 2000 > > Ultimate Bulletin Board 5.45c > > Hyperbaric Information Resource: Click Here > > We would like to thank everyone who have been sending testimonies, > > letters, research papers, photos, etc. for the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project. Your efforts are changing peoples lives for the better! > > Global Hyperbaric Resource Project was recently founded to create a > > searchable centralized public source of Hyperbaric Information and > > Patient Testimonies on the Internet. Some Hyperbaric Web sites go > > off-line or get buried at the bottom of the search engines and > > valuable > > information is lost or never found. With the Global Hyperbaric > > Resource > > Project we are asking everyone to use www.hyperbaric-forum.com as a > > staging ground to build a unified location to refer people for > > Hyperbaric > > Information. Many volunteers have been adding their information to > > the > > database and including a link in that information back to their web > > site. > > Until now Hyperbaric Information has been loosely scattered across > > the > > internet with not enough in one location for a potential patient to > > come > > to an educated decision about Hyperbaric Therapy. The Global > > Hyperbaric > > Resource Project hopes to change this and will be a great benefit to > > anyone considering Hyperbaric Therapy. > > > > On Fri, 29 Jun 2001 03:11:27 -0000 naturalhealthway@... > > writes: > > > said,> Wayne, Are you out of your mind? > > > My Dear , > > > I've noticed many of your replies seem to have the angle of pushing > > > your HBOT facility and promoting your " expert skills " . > > > Someone with engineering and technical abilities like being able to > > > weld airtight seams and pressure test vessels could make an HBOT if > > > they really put their mind to it. It doesn't need to have all the > > > bells and whistles of professional chamber. One could make a > > > chamber > > > out of a large propane tank. It is already made to sustain the > > > pressure. Apparently your capabilities don't allow you to imagine > > > how > > > someone might go about this. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Re: HBOT > > > > > > > > > > > > > Evening Dr. Saul and the list, > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >But I though that you posted previously that there were HBOT > > > chambers > > > > sold > > > > > >for $40,000. Not yours, but other ones. > > > > > > > > > > No doubt others have thought of the question I have. > > > > > > > > > > Surely a super craftsman with determination could build a home > > > system from > > > > > junk he can find here and there to result if a fully functional > > > HBOT > > > > system. > > > > > > > > > > I have an eight by 10 walk in cooler that is virtually air > > > tight. It > > > > could > > > > > be sealed with any material imaginable. > > > > > > > > > > Getting the door to be pressure tight would be the only > > problem. > > > > > > Maybe we > > > > > could swipe the hatch off a submarine or similar. > > > > > > > > > > I am into control systems, at one time manufactured medical > > > products, > > > > > designed manifolds and valves. I could certainly build a fully > > > computer > > > > > controlled system for the HBOT. > > > > > > > > > > Tell me I am crazy.... if you think so. <grin> > > > > > > > > > > Wayne > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 2, 2001 Report Share Posted July 2, 2001 Hello Wayne, if bolts are on inside...won't this pose a safety hazard, if person inside feints, how is person out side going to open door??? unless we have a big door latched /bolts on out side and a smaller latch / bolts on inside... then either side can gain exit /entrance from either side in an emergency. mike slivinski On Sun, 01 Jul 2001 11:23:58 -0500 Wayne Fugitt <wayne@...> writes: > Morning , > > > At 02:10 AM 07/01/2001 -0700, you wrote: > >Dear Wayne I was talking about the article which the man died in a > Hypobaric > >chamber, NOT a hyperbaric Chamber. I was not speaking to you > > > > Yes, I read that one also. I formed some opinions and ideas > while > reading it. > > First, I would like the bolts on the inside. It takes much less > strength > and pressure to hold the seal if the door opened to the inside, very > much > like some valves are designed. > > Even my walk in cooler could take a life in a similar manner, if not > for the > inside door latch. > > Again.... I would trust no one but myself. > > My final deduction was that his wife intentionally killed him. > > Wayne > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 2, 2001 Report Share Posted July 2, 2001 Hello Wayne, if bolts are on inside...won't this pose a safety hazard, if person inside feints, how is person out side going to open door??? unless we have a big door latched /bolts on out side and a smaller latch / bolts on inside... then either side can gain exit /entrance from either side in an emergency. mike slivinski On Sun, 01 Jul 2001 11:23:58 -0500 Wayne Fugitt <wayne@...> writes: > Morning , > > > At 02:10 AM 07/01/2001 -0700, you wrote: > >Dear Wayne I was talking about the article which the man died in a > Hypobaric > >chamber, NOT a hyperbaric Chamber. I was not speaking to you > > > > Yes, I read that one also. I formed some opinions and ideas > while > reading it. > > First, I would like the bolts on the inside. It takes much less > strength > and pressure to hold the seal if the door opened to the inside, very > much > like some valves are designed. > > Even my walk in cooler could take a life in a similar manner, if not > for the > inside door latch. > > Again.... I would trust no one but myself. > > My final deduction was that his wife intentionally killed him. > > Wayne > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 2, 2001 Report Share Posted July 2, 2001 Morning Mike, >if bolts are on inside...won't this pose a safety hazard, >if person inside feints, how is person out side going to >open door??? True, a very good point. >unless we have a big door latched /bolts on out side and a smaller >latch / bolts on inside... then either side can gain exit /entrance >from either side in an emergency. I don't think this would be a hill to climb. Actually I don't like the idea of bolts any way you cut it. Many other good latch designs would seems to make the bolts unnecessary. I would feel relatively safe using magnetic locks. We use these in a variety of applications. Forces range from 600 lbs to 1200 lbs. Of course 2 or 4 of these could be used. In reality they were not designed for this application. They can be installed as " fail safe " or " fail secure " . I feel that anyone bolting himself in ..... any airtight container, has in fact played the first round of " Russian Roulette " . Wayne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 2, 2001 Report Share Posted July 2, 2001 Folks, I find this interesting personally, but this discussion has gone into engineering & left health issues far behind. Please, no more without legitimate new health issues. jim oxyplus moderator Wayne Fugitt wrote: > > Morning Mike, > > >if bolts are on inside...won't this pose a safety hazard, > >if person inside feints, how is person out side going to > >open door??? > > True, a very good point. > > >unless we have a big door latched /bolts on out side and a smaller ----- The TRUTH in 11 words: Inside every older person is a younger person wondering what happened! -- anon jlambert@... http://www.entrance.to/madscience http://www.entrance.to/poetry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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