HBOT for Carcinoma – Adjunct Therapy

“I am back in control of my body and my mind,” Cole said.

Scars litter the arms of retired Navy Captain John Cole. The fresher ones are pink while the lighter ones had healed over the years. Dozens more are hidden beneath his clothing from the tops of this knees up the front of his body. “I’ve had 51 carcinomas. Last 7 years I’ve averaged, in the melanoma clinic at Portsmouth Naval Hospital, four biopsies with one positive every quarter. So that’s 16 biopsies and four carcinomas a year,” Cole said. “Since I’ve done this [hyperbaric oxygen therapy], going on 26 months I have had just nine biopsies and one carcinoma. Physically, Cole said, he is a new man.

Cole, a Virginia Beach resident, is one of hundreds of military veterans who have been treated at Tier 1 Therapy Centers, formerly Hampton Roads Hyperbaric Center in Norfolk’s Neon District. The female veteran-owned private clinic at 129 W. Virginia Beach Blvd. attracts patients from Williamsburg, Richmond, and Elizabeth City, North Carolina.

For the hyperbaric therapy, up to four people climb inside what looks like a small submarine to go “diving.” Once inside, the chamber is slowly pressurized to simulate 16-33 feet below sea level. Patients are administered 100% medical grade oxygen through a lightweight hood worn over their heads for 60-90 minutes before gradually returning to normal pressure levels.

The center also has a mono chamber designed to hold a single patient.

“When you have illness, injury or disease, a lot of times your cells don’t function properly. They don’t get the oxygen that they need,” said Cara Mae Melton, president of the therapy center.

Holding the tip of her finger tightly, making it turn purple, Melton added, “If you cut off oxygen, even at this small little level, your finger starts to turn. If you kept that like that, eventually the cells would die. The same thing happens when you have an injury. You knock out the blood flow, and sometimes it doesn’t come back.”

The treatment forces 100% oxygen to permeate through the blood plasma, eventually creating new blood cells that carry more oxygen further into the tissue at a greater rate. This treatment encourages the body to heal itself, the clinic website says. It is considered adjunctive and should be used in conjunction with other treatment options.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can be used to treat myriad injuries, illnesses and diseases, Melton said, such as neuropathy, chronic pain, inflammation and stroke. But it also treats wounds that are invisible to the eye — depression, anxiety, anger, insomnia, which can all lead to suicidal ideations. The Food and Drug Administration has cleared its use for certain medical conditions, but other uses are considered off-label.

“Our niche has organically become traumatic brain injury treatment and post-traumatic stress disorder treatment for special operation forces veterans,” Melton said.

An American flag sits on the control panel for the multiperson hyperbaric chamber at Tier 1 Therapy Centers in Norfolk on Wednesday. Tier 1 has been using hyperbaric therapy to treat veterans with traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder. (Kendall Warner/The Virginian-Pilot)

Tier 1 Therapy Centers originally opened under a different name in 2012. Since then, the center has treated hundreds of veterans for service-related injuries and illnesses.

“Military training in itself is detrimental on the body. Members experience concussions and minor brain injuries all the time. They are around concussive incidents, like repeated gunfire, which creates little bubbles in the brain,” said Melton, a Navy veteran who served from 1995 to 2000.

The “toxic environment” combined with the high tempo, high stress nature of training and deployment cycles, she said, can overtake the body, which is when patients will begin to experience persistent headaches, insomnia and changes in mood and behavior.

“When you have that over and over again, your body stops healing it,” Melton said.

The treatment plan is expensive, averaging $7,000 per patient, and demanding as it requires most patients to commit to coming to the center Monday through Friday for eight weeks.

There are 14 health conditions that can be treated with hyperbaric oxygen therapy for which insurance will pay. Off-label treatments for service-related traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder are not covered by insurance.

Cara Mae Melton, president of the company, talks about the benefits of hyperbaric therapy at Tier 1 Therapy Centers in Norfolk on Wednesday. (Kendall Warner/The Virginian-Pilot)

So, the center seeks other funding sources like donations and grants from nonprofit organizations to help pay veterans’ treatment bills, particularly with more than 700,000 veterans across Virginia and 200,000 living in Hampton Roads, Melton said.

She said nonprofits have to go out into the community and drum up awareness, interest and money “at a time when people think that everything is fine with our veterans because we are not actively at war.”

In March, Virginia lawmakers passed Senate Bill 1082, which allows the Department of Veterans Services to recommend hyperbaric oxygen therapy for veterans with traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder. This, Melton said, is a glimmer of hope that veterans will eventually receive insurance coverage for their invisible wounds.

Until then, Virginia Beach nonprofit Coastal Authority Care Foundation works to raise funding for veterans to receive the oxygen therapy. Jill Crist created the foundation in 2015 after her husband, a retired Navy SEAL, received the treatment in Texas.

“My husband was saying ‘I don’t want to be here anymore’,” Crist said. “Doctors were giving him medication for sleep. They were giving him medication for migraines. They were giving him medication for depression. And it was just all making him feel drugged. It was all he could do to make it through the day.”

Another retired SEAL told the Crists about hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Crist said the paperwork for a consultation sat on their kitchen counter for two months before she filled it out for her husband.

“He was being obstinate because he felt others needed it more than him,” Crist said, “but I was thinking no one needed it more than him. The spouse sees the burden they carry.”

Her husband participated in a brain stimulation therapy and followed it up with eight weeks of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in March 2015.

“He was golden, just positively golden — and his body was healing,” Crist said. “He was sleeping again, and he started working out again, training for a crazy 32-mile paddleboard race from Molokai to Oahu. He completed the race in 2018.”

Crist and her husband returned from Texas and immediately launched the nonprofit organization in an effort to raise awareness and funding for the therapy. In 2022, it donated $40,000 in grants to 11 veterans.

“I was one of those veterans,” Cole said.

An American flag sits on the the multiperson hyperbaric chamber at Tier 1 Therapy Centers, formerly known as Hampton Roads Hyperbaric Chambers, in Norfolk on Wednesday. Tier 1 has been using hyperbaric therapy to treat veterans with traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder. (Kendall Warner/The Virginian-Pilot)

Cole went through about six weeks — or 30 sessions — of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in February 2022 and about two weeks of “maintenance” hyperbaric oxygen therapy in the fall.

Cole said he was about halfway through the therapy when he noticed an improved mood and consistently better sleep — a departure from the sleep deprivation and mood swings he had experienced. Over the next year, he realized his body was no longer riddled with current carcinomas, healing wounds, stitches. All of which were a side effect of the intense radiation he was exposed to from the radars while flying F-14 and F-18 fighter jets for three decades.

“The military trains everybody to compartmentalize — to ignore everything that is going on around and unto themselves so they can focus on the mission,” Cole said. “So, you don’t go to the doctor when you have a problem. You try and hide the problem so you can deploy, so you can fly the airplanes, so you can do your job. And when you get out, you don’t know where to start.”

Cole said his medical battle overwhelmed his immune system and himself. On one hand I was fighting major inflammation from a broken neck incurred while flying Tomcats (Cole is fused C7-C3) and the toxicity of my skin which seemed to be a fertile ground for cancerous growth.  Until like Jill’s husband, a friend, also SPECWAR told me about HBOT and his personal success story. However. It’s a multi front battle,  I have a great team of folks at Portsmouth Naval Hospital who have found and removed all the carcinomas before they could get in deep and become metastatic. But nowhere could I find how to reduce the number of carcinomas growing on my body. That is until HBOT.

“You take strong people and just assume they are going to be strong for the rest of their life,” Cole said. “It is a trapdoor.”

Motioning to Melton and Crist, he added, “I owe my life to them, because that’s what they are doing — saving lives.”

Caitlyn Burchett, [email protected]

Caitlyn Burchett, [email protected]

Photos: Kendall Warner/The Virginian-Pilot

The original article was originally published in the Virginian Pilot on 9/11/23 titled, “Hampton Roads oxygen therapy gives hope to veterans suffering from service-related illnesses.”

Benefits of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for Post-Surgery Recovery

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) is a medical treatment that involves breathing pure oxygen in a pressurized chamber. This therapy has gained attention for its benefits in post-surgery recovery, aiding in healing processes and reducing complications for patients undergoing various surgical procedures.

HBOT involves the administration of 100% oxygen at a pressure greater than atmospheric pressure. This increased pressure allows the lungs to gather more oxygen than normal, which is then circulated throughout the body via the bloodstream. The high levels of oxygen promote healing by enhancing the body’s natural ability to repair and regenerate damaged tissues.

1. Wound Healing: Oxygen plays a crucial role in the wound healing process. HBOT can help improve blood flow to surgical wounds, promote the growth of new blood vessels, and enhance the delivery of oxygen and nutrients to the tissues, thereby accelerating the healing process.

2. Reduced Infections: HBOT has antimicrobial properties that can help reduce the risk of post-surgical infections. The increased oxygen levels create an environment that is less favorable for the growth of bacteria, ultimately lowering the chances of infection at the surgical site.

3. Reduced Swelling and Inflammation: Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can help reduce swelling and inflammation post-surgery. By decreasing tissue edema and inflammation, HBOT may alleviate discomfort, improve mobility, and promote faster recovery for patients.

4. Improved Recovery from Complications: For patients who experience complications such as tissue damage, delayed wound healing, or radiation-induced injuries following surgery, HBOT can be a valuable adjunctive therapy. It can help mitigate the effects of these complications and support the body’s healing mechanisms.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy represents a valuable adjunct therapeutic option for enhancing post-surgery recovery outcomes. By leveraging the healing properties of oxygen under increased pressure, HBOT can support wound healing, reduce complications, and promote overall recovery for patients undergoing surgical procedures.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) for Multiple Sclerosis:

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) for Multiple Sclerosis: A Promising Adjunctive Treatment

Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic autoimmune condition affecting the central nervous system, leading to a range of debilitating symptoms. Although there is no cure for MS, various therapies aim to alleviate symptoms and slow disease progression. One such therapy that has garnered attention in recent years is Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT).

Lisa was diagnosed with MS 30 years ago. She first heard about HBOT from a friend who had read that people with MS undergoing HBOT were experiencing symptom improvement. “I have relapsing-remitting MS. I had numbness in my legs and hands and could not make a fist. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy made all that go away. The abdominal “MS grip” went away too,” said Lisa. “I did HBOT 5 days a week for 6 months and backed it off over time to where I now only have to do it twice a month to keep my symptoms at bay. Everyone’s body is different but I highly recommend it for MS. It has made a huge difference in my life.”

HBOT involves breathing pure oxygen in a pressurized room or chamber, allowing the lungs to take in more oxygen than normal. This increased oxygen supply is believed to promote healing processes in the body, making it an intriguing option for MS patients.

The rationale behind HBOT for MS lies in its potential to reduce inflammation, promote tissue repair, and enhance the delivery of oxygen to damaged areas of the brain and spinal cord. Studies have suggested that oxygen therapy may have neuroprotective effects, potentially slowing the progression of the disease and improving certain symptoms.

A 1983 clinical trial published in the New England Journal of Medicine indicated that HBOT significantly improved syptoms in MS patients. Research on the use of HBOT for MS is ongoing, with some studies reporting positive outcomes, including neuroprotective effects.

To find out out more about HBOT for multiple sclerosis, call 757-452-3934 to speak with our patient care coordinator to weigh the potential benefits against the risks. It’s crucial to approach HBOT as an adjunctive therapy rather than a standalone treatment for MS, as it is not a replacement for established disease-modifying therapies and symptom management strategies.

*Disclaimer: Information provided here is not to be considered medical advice. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for non-approved, off-label indications is considered to be investigational.

ADD and Chronic Pain

Terry came to Hampton Roads Hyperbaric seeking to improve her cognition associated with Attention Deficit Disorder and relief from chronic pain. Prior to treatment, Terry had chest pains hourly. After 40 sessions she stopped having chest pains completely. Terry has gained her focus and short term memory back. 

HBOT works to treat ADD naturally by increasing blood flow to the brain with 100% pressurized oxygen, which gets rid of the toxins allowing for healthy tissues to restore. Research shows that neuro-inflammation is one of the factors of ADD. HBOT has been shown to reduce inflammation allowing the brain to do its job. 

Watch Terry’s story!

Hyperbaric oxygen used for ADD and chronic pain

 

Post COVID Recovery

May had COVID in September of 2022 and has not been feeling her normal energy level ever since then. A few days into the acute symptom phase, her pulse oxygen level got down to 77 and she felt like she couldn’t breath. May is a personal trainer and considers herself a healthy person, works out every day and is very particular about her diet.

May heard about hyperbaric oxygen therapy and that it had helped people with post COVID symptoms and she knew she had to investigate this therapy right away. After her first session, May says she feels like she was getting better and better after each session.

The Center for Disease Control (CDC) estimates 30% of the 5.5 million patients hospitalized with COVID-19 since August 2020 are suffering from long COVID syndrome, also known as long-haul COVID or post COVID conditions. Doctors and clinics around the globe are starting to look at hyperbaric oxygen therapy as a way to combat post COVID 19 syndrome due to its proven anti-inflammatory effects.

Watch May’s Story

https://youtu.be/iRytg5tJ4Iw

 

Traumatic Brain Injury in Veterans

More than 450,000 veterans and active duty military have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injury since 2000. Travis suffered two traumatic brain injuries while on active duty and now suffers from post concussion syndrome. 

Travis says it has caused a tremendous amount of turmoil in his life between aggression, concentration and memory issues, as well as anxiety and depression.

Travis contacted Tier I Therapy Centers (formerly Hampton Roads Hyperbaric Therapy) and noticed a huge improvement in his symptoms and performing activities of everyday life.

When neurons are “idling” from traumatic brain injury, they are not receiving the oxygen they need to send the proper signals our body needs for normal functioning. Giving 100% oxygen with 2 to 3 atmospheres of pressure delivers 20 times the amount of oxygen to the tissues more than if you were breathing room air (21%) under normal living conditions. This provides immediate help to ischemic and compromised tissue with marginal blood flow. HBOT floods the cells with oxygen, forcing it into the plasma allowing them to thrive and revive. 

Recent research has shown that cells can be revived with 100% pressurized oxygen. SPECT imaging, computer-based cognitive assessments, self-assessments and QEEG conducted pre and post therapy show the effectiveness of hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

Call us today for a consultation at 757-452-3934.

Watch Travis’ story!

https://youtu.be/A-a3WrxvUSs

 

Neuropathy

Joyce developed sudden neuropathic pain and numbness after being prescribed medication. With no prior history of neuropathy, Joyce was unable to drive, go anywhere alone, and she has difficulty standing and walking. After being told her side effects would most likely be permanent, Joyce decided to seek alternative treatment and found hyperbaric oxygen. Watch her story and see how she is doing today!

HBOT is an effective treatment for neuropathy by driving oxygen deep into tissues, reviving cells and reducing pain symptoms. Hyperbaric stimulates the growth of new blood cells, allowing the body to increase effective oxygen and nutrient delivery. Hyperbaric uses 100% pure oxygen to allow the body to heal in a healthy and natural way.

 

See Joyce’s Story Here

Parkinson’s Disease

Shirly had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease in 1995 and had tried all of the traditional treatment options, changing her diet, taking a hand-full of medications with side effects. She was faced with the news that she’d soon have to be in a wheelchair. Shirley came into Hampton Roads Hyperbaric struggling with speech and balance. After 40 sessions, Shirley could hold a conversation and was able to play golf and go on walks again!

HBOT decreases inflammation and stimulates the growth of new, healthy blood cells. Research suggests that neurological outcomes by increasing enzymes in the body that protect cells and prevent neuronal damage. In Parkinson’s patients, HBOT decreases depression, anxiety, and tremors.

Here’s Shirley’s Story:

Hyperbaric Oxygen Treatment for Parkinson’s Disease

 

Traumatic Brain Injury

Sabrina was in a motor vehicle accident, causing a traumatic brain injury. Since the crash Sabrina couldn’t focus well and her memory was impaired. After 40 hyperbaric treatments, Sabrina gained her memory back, was able to have a conversation without having to pause and think about her next words and processing the information she received. 

 

We know that the brain needs oxygen to survive and function properly, right? Brain trauma limits the flow of oxygen to the injured part of the brain causing cell damage. HBOT floods the cells with oxygen, forcing it into the plasma allowing them to thrive and revive. 

 

Recent research has shown that cells can be revived with 100% pressurized oxygen. SPECT imaging, computer-based cognitive assessments, self-assessments and QEEG conducted pre and post therapy show the effectiveness of hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

 

Watch Sabrina’s story!

Using Hyperbaric Oxygen for Traumatic Brain Injury