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» LymeNet Flash » Questions and Discussion » Medical Questions » Hyperbaric Oxygen Chambers

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Author Topic: Hyperbaric Oxygen Chambers
sfcharm
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Has anyone had success with doing the hyperbaric oxygen chambers??

I am just now looking into doing it. Here's some interesting information.

http://www.hbotreatment.com/lyme.htm

Any feedback would be most appreciated. If you did it how many dives did you take before you felt some effects.

Is there any danger to doing this?

Barb

Posts: 281 | From san francisco | Registered: Jun 2006  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
WildCondor
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HBOT is a wonderful adjunctive therapy for Lyme disease. It is best done while on aggressive antibiotics. If you click on the "search" button on here, and type in HBO or HBOT you will bring up all the posts on this topic. [Smile]

Here is some info:
http://publichealthalert.org/HBOand%20Lyme%20-%20Zeller.pdf

http://publichealthalert.org/Deep%20Diving%20for%20a%20Cure%20part%202.pdf

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BOEJR
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Hi there Barb [hi]

HBOT is a great therapy when used in conjunction with antibiotic therapy. It will help to put you in a better place. Helps to heal the damage done to the brain and boosts the immunne system.

I like to recommend from personal experience and by looking at the progress of my clients:

That you have yourself tested for heavy metals.... You will get better results from any therapy you choose if your immunne system is not challenged by metal toxicity.

That you also incorporate natural therapies so that your body can process ingredients with less effort.

That you maintain a diet low carbs etc..

That you rule out any co infections that may hinder your progress.

That you practice and develop skills to help you cope with stress. Stress is a lyme suffers' worst enemy period...

That you incorporate a detox program that works for you...

HBOT will kill the spirochete and cause you to herx severely.

However, some people require many sessions, and some are more sensitive then others and need fewer. Each individual is different.

I like to recommend an occassional "dive" for maintance of your gains.

I hope this helps to answer some questions. If you need any assistance in finding a center near you that is experienced in treating lyme patients feel free to contact me.

Blessings,

Julia

--------------------
Please consult your LLMD before making any changes to your treatment regimen.

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CaliforniaLyme
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HBO Therapy is a GREAT adjunctive therapy and really helps some people, not everyone... It is VERY expensive and can have transient gains but for some people the gains stay- here is a HBO story of some of the original Lymies who tried it with Dr. Fife*)!!

******************************
One family's life forever altered by Lyme Disease

A woman and her children contracted the disease on a hiking trip in Wisconsin.


By ANNE L. BOLES Palm Beach Post Staff Writer


LUTZ -- At 7 a.m. sharp, Susan Parrish straps on latex gloves and starts preparing the elixirs that will keep her family alive another day.


The Palm Beach native plucks vials of antibiotics from an overflowing
bin on the kitchen table. By lamplight, she screws on needles and mixes
chemicals, taps syringes and squeezes plungers.


Asleep on the couch is 11-year-old Chase, a tube snaking from his chest
to a plastic bag strung above him from a metal stand. The bag is empty.


Like his mother, he is blonde and fineboned. When he awakes, he will be
in pain.


Chase has Lyme Parrish Disease, an insidious and sometimes deadly germ
found more commonly in the Northeast, though 16 cases were diagnosed in
Florida in 1995.


Susan Parrish has Lyme Disease too, and so does big brother Blake, who
comes bounding downstairs with a 14 year-old's energy, all gangly arms
and legs and shy grins. And so does Skye, who at 7 is too young and too
optimistic to believe that her arthritic limbs will never learn to
dance.


Like most victims in Florida, the Parrishes caught Lyme Disease
elsewhere: Wisconsin, in this case -- while outdoors. Because doctors
here didn't know to expect it, the disease spread undiagnosed for more
than three years.


Only Susan's husband, Wayne Parrish is spared the chronic aches and
sudden seizures that have robbed his family of a normal life and
mystified doctors.


Countless hours in university libraries and a mother's determination
would track down the corkscrew-shaped bacteria that had wormed its way
into her sinew, bone and nerve: strong medicine and Stronger faith would
begin its exorcism.


But it may be too late. Chase has had four strokes already. Susan has
heart trouble and now has a tangle of blood vessels in her brain.


A new treatment raises hopes for a cure, or at least a respite. Texas
A&M University is experimenting with a hyperbaric oxygen chamber which
floods patients with pure oxygen to kill the anaerobic germs en masse.


Texas is far away, and getting there is expensive. The treatment is
experimental. It may have painful side effects. It may not work. Yet it
is, quite literally, their last hope.


Love Of outdoors worked against family


The Parrishs' light, airy house, with its wood beams and yawning
cathedral ceiling, is set amid a network of lakes and trees in a rustic
town just north of Tampa.


Susan Hoadley Parrish, 38, grew up in Palm Beach and graduated from
Cardinal Newton School. After college, she married David Wayne Parrish,
39, who works for an insurance company in Tampa.


Their family loves the outdoors, still does, although they can never
behold it with the same innocent fascination.


Susan Parrish can remember the last day calf normal life clearly,
sometime in May 1992. The family was living in Wisconsin then and the
big woods beckoned.


She and her three children set off for one of their customary walks,
this time abandoning the usual trail to make their own way. Wayne did
not accompany them.


She remembers the hip-tall grass and picking asparagus from a field. She
remembers everyone wearing shorts and marveling at the forest's
emptiness. It did not occur to her that others stayed away for a
reason.


That night while showering, oldest son Blake, then 9, pulled a tick from
his ear. Otherwise no one noticed anything unusual.


When Mom and the kids came down with the flu that summer, that was odd.
But when Chase, then 6, suffered a stroke, something was clearly,
awfully wrong. "He fell down ... and said,'My left side won't work,
Mommy,'" said Susan. "I said, 'What do you mean Get up.'"


Chase would go in and out of hospitals after that suffering four strokes
in all. He had to relearn how to talk and walk and lost much of the use
of his right arm.


With his immune system weakened, Chase could not produce the tell-tale
antibodies that show up in tests for Lyme Disease. When the test was
done, the results came bark negative.


The Parrishes had transferred back to Florida by then, and had begun
what would be a frustrating, four-year journey through hospital wards
and doctors' offices.


"Meanwhile, the rest of us had weird symptoms," Susan continues, "I had
chest pains. Blake had joint pains. Skye was little. around 2. She would
walk and just fall right down where she was."


Susan made a list of all their symptoms and went hunting through medical
journals and textbooks. Could there be one disease that would do all
this? There was.


Lyme Disease 2nd to AIDS in growth rate


Borrelia burgdorfei: is spiral-shaped like the syphilis germ and twists
into cells where it hides.


It surfaced in the 1970s in Lyme. Conn., and was traced to the tiny deer
tick.


Other ticks can carry it as well Lyme Disease has spread through 43
states quickly and is now second only to AIDS in its growth rate, recent
research shows.


The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded 11,603 new
cases of Lyme Disease in 43 states in 1995, according to the most recent
statistics. It is still found most often in lower New England and the
Middle Atlantic.


Florida recorded 16 confirmed cases in 1995, the last year for which
statistics are available. Most caught the disease elsewhere said stats
officials, although several people had not traveled out of state, and
therefore must have caught it from ticks here.


While the number seems low, diagnosing Lyme Disease is tricky, according
to the CDC and other researchers. It is often misdiagnosed because its
symptoms can, mimic those of the flu, arthritis or even multiple
sclerosis.


Nearly hall its victims Bet a bull's-eye rash and then may suffer
seemingly unrelated ailments: inflammations, joint and muscle pain,
palsies, fatigue blindness, headaches, hallucinations, depression and
seizures, to name a few.


Experimental treatment offers hope


In 1995, Susan finally wore doctors down with her insistence that
everyone be tested for Lyme Disease. She was right, but getting the
illness successfully diagnosed did not necessarily taring relief.


The Lyme Disease germ reproduces slowly, according to research reports.
and can be cured easily if caught early, but the illness had several
years head start.


Progress has been slow Despite the antibiotics dripped into them, Chase
and Skye remain too sick to attend school, and complete their lessons at
home.


"The gene is sensitive to higher levels of oxygen," said Dr. William
Fife a professor at Texas A&M University's health science center. "It
gets into the cell where there's not enough oxygen to harm the germ It
lives' there very nicely, and it makes it hard for antibiotics to get to
the germ."


Fife is experimenting with a hyperbaric oxygen chamber, the same device
used to cure deep-sea divers of the bends.


Patients sit in a compression chamber and wear oxygen masks for about an
hour. The germs ate flushed out and destroyed, Fife said. Of 23
patients so far, all but one have reported feeling better.


Some have stayed free of symptoms for five or six months so far. Others
had symptoms resurface after a few months. Part of his research is
determining how many sessions are needed, and for how long, said Fife.


Because it is experimental, the treatment is free. But how to get there?
Who would pay for plane tickets, hotels, meals and a million other
things?


Church embraces family, raises money


Two years ago, Susan visited Larry Mills' Bible study class to make a
plea for help.


"There were 40 or 50 people, and she had us all in tears," said Mills,
now a close family friend. "We just formed a circle around her, five and
six deep, and everybody just prayed."


The Parrishes have turned to their congregation the Idlewild Baptist
Church at 1515 West Bearss Avenue in Tampa, for strength and help.
Church members have done chores that Susan is too weak to perform and
raised money toward the nearly $400,000 in medical bills.


The church set up the Parrish Family Fund still in existence, and a
local newspaper ran a story before Christmas to describe their desperate
need for the Texas trip.


Cards, letters and donations began to pour in. The New York Yankees,
whose spring training stadium is in Tampa, offered to pay their airfare.


The donations made a dent in their debts, and gave reason to hope, to
push away the fear that Susan can only whisper out of earshot of her
children.


"This little thing in my brain could go," she said. "Or Chase could have
one more stroke that would be the one to kill him."


Father can only wait, hope


"I miss them terribly," Wayne Parrish said over the telephone. "This is
harder than I ever anticipated. I missed Valentine's Day. Monday was her
(Susan's) birthday. It all adds up."


Wayne spoke from his home in Lutz. His family was in College Station,
Texas. From a motel room, Susan Parrish sounded upbeat. They were midway
through their treatments.


Susan's father, Thomas Hoadley, had sold his West Palm Beach law
practice to care for them and accompanied them to Texas.


At first, things didn't go too well. Blake suffered chest pains in a
restaurant, Susan said, and put his head on the table and cried.


Then Susan felt pain shooting through her chest.


"I cried all the way home," she said. "I screamed in the hotel room. My
father didn't know what to do."


Chase and Skye also had trouble at first.


"Then all of a sudden, they got up and were stomping around with the
oxygen masks on their heads, making animal noises," said Susan. "(Chase
and Skye are completely exuberant compared to what they were.


"Dr. Fife (joked) he was going to reinforce the walls after the Parrish
kids had been in there. They're more like normal kids."


Staff researcher Yiao Kai Chen contributed to this report.

--------------------
There is no wealth but life.
-John Ruskin

All truth goes through 3 stages: first it is ridiculed: then it is violently opposed: finally it is accepted as self evident. - Schopenhauer

Posts: 5639 | From Aptos CA USA | Registered: Apr 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
mama
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When I looking for hyperbaric oxygen therapy, I found this site.

Is this treatment really helps for Lyme disease? Is anybody try hyperbaric oxygen therapy?
Every body said that Lyme disease bacteria will die when you take this treatment because bacteria can not alive in the high percentage oxygen blood.
I could not believe. If it is really true why any doctor does not recommend it except hyperbaric therapy company's doctor?
And why insurance company does not help it?

I agree that hyperbaric therapy will help with bad body symptom make a OK.
But, I could not find any medical company or university research show how much percentage bacteria die or every bacteria die.

I am not American, so my English is not good.
If somebody knows about hyperbaric oxygen therapy please answer my question.

Thank you

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CaliforniaLyme
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WELCOME MAMA*)!*)!
!)!**!)!*)!*!)*!

I am from California as well. What is your native language? There is a Spanish Lyme group if it is Spanish- it is supposed to be a really good group!!

Oxygen therapy is expensive and does not work for everyone. Most insurance will not cover it because of that. For some people it does work and most people do it along WITH antibiotic therapy. We had a local girl get into full remission with antibiotics and oxygen therapy. Do you have Lyme or a family member?
Welcome, welcome, welcome*)!*)!

Sincerely,

--------------------
There is no wealth but life.
-John Ruskin

All truth goes through 3 stages: first it is ridiculed: then it is violently opposed: finally it is accepted as self evident. - Schopenhauer

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oxygenbabe
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Hyperbaric oxygen is a powerful adjunctive treatment. It totally suppresses spirochetes but there is some form it does not kill as if you do it all by itself and stop, eventually you will relapse. If you do it with potent antibiotics it will be synergistic.
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David95928
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CaliforniaLyme
Could you give me and address for the Spanish group. My parents re trying to help someone in Mexico. Thanks.
David

--------------------
Dave

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CaliforniaLyme
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Yes David- here it is-!*)!!

The Spanish Lyme group.

[email protected]

--------------------
There is no wealth but life.
-John Ruskin

All truth goes through 3 stages: first it is ridiculed: then it is violently opposed: finally it is accepted as self evident. - Schopenhauer

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