Guest guest Posted August 10, 2010 Report Share Posted August 10, 2010 Thanks for the info. Like any treatment, you need to know who your patient is and why you are doing it. If they conducted this study on autistic children who did not have symptoms of what this is trying to treat, then there was most likely no good result. However, if they would have conducted the study on children known to have inflammatory markers, the results might (and I emphasize might) have been different. My son was a responder and so was one of my good friend’s son to mild HBOT. He does have inflammation in his brain. We saw results for a while and then he plateaued. We have learned that we have to pulse the treatments and take breaks for stretches at a time. AND that was before we even knew he had PANDAS, so I am very hopeful that since we have lowered his titers A LOT that we could see even more gains. I have heard good things about Thoughtful House, but I have to say that we need to know how they screened their candidates and if the children were treating the cause of inflammation prior to or during HBOT treatment. I wonder…… if they did this as a stand-alone treatment study, probably not a good test. Some well-respected people in the autism world do not believe in one treatment or another for various reasons and I don’t know this particular groups’ philosophy on HBOT. If anyone does, please share. We can all learn from this information. Heidi J. From: mb12 valtrex [mailto:mb12 valtrex ] On Behalf Of Sloan Sent: Tuesday, August 10, 2010 6:54 PM To: mb12 valtrex Subject: I fyou are considering HBOT, consider this: Controlled Evaluation of the Effects of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy on the Behavior of 16 Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders. Jepson B, Granpeesheh D, Tarbox J, Olive ML, Stott C, Braud S, Yoo JH, Wakefield A, MS. Thoughtful House Center for Children, Austin, TX, USA. Abstract Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) has been used to treat individuals with autism. However, few studies of its effectiveness have been completed. The current study examined the effects of 40 HBOT sessions at 24% oxygen at 1.3 ATA on 11 topographies of directly observed behavior. Five replications of multiple baselines were completed across a total of 16 participants with autism spectrum disorders. No consistent effects were observed across any group or within any individual participant, demonstrating that HBOT was not an effective treatment for the participants in this study. This study represents the first relatively large-scale controlled study evaluating the effects of HBOT at the level of the individual participant, on a wide array of behaviors. PMID: 20680427 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher] No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3050 - Release Date: 08/10/10 14:34:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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