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Israeli research helps get muscles moving again

In the hyperbaric chamber, the body is flooded with oxygen to aid healing

July 11, 2018 13:37
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By

Anthea Gerrie,

Anthea Gerrie

2 min read

A treatment mainly for divers — or a revolutionary aid to repairing brain damage? Research in Israel is driving the idea that hyperbaric therapy could benefit the population at large, especially those with neurological conditions.

Studies led by Dr Shai Efrati have shown that sessions within a chamber where oxygen is delivered to the body at high pressure can significantly help recovery from stroke and many other conditions. In addition to relieving the symptoms of decompression illness, gas embolism and carbon monoxide poisoning for which the NHS has licensed it, HBOT, as the therapy is known, may also help sufferers of multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome and impotence, it is claimed.

Efrati, who presides over the Sagol hyperbaric unit at Assaf Harofeh Hospital near Tel Aviv, spells out the results of his research with patients in a 2015 talk on YouTube.

“After 20 sessions we saw a huge amount of stem cells going all over the body looking for damage to repair,” he says, explaining why the head has been a primary point of focus. “In our body, the most complex organ is the brain; it occupies only two per cent of our body mass but consumes 20 per cent of our oxygen.

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