Conversations about the benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) often swing between “miracle treatment” and “overhyped chamber of oxygen.”
If you live with a brain injury, stubborn wound, radiation damage, or complex pain, that kind of noise doesn’t help much.
You need to understand where HBOT truly adds value, where the evidence is still inconclusive, and whether it makes sense in your specific situation. Let’s find out.
According to the National Library of Medicine, hyperbaric oxygen therapy exposes a patient to 100% oxygen in a chamber where the air pressure is higher than usual, typically ranging from two to three times the standard atmospheric pressure.
Under these conditions, the lungs take up much more oxygen than they can at room air and normal pressure.
Oxygen in the bloodstream typically travels mainly attached to hemoglobin in red blood cells. During HBOT, a larger amount of oxygen also dissolves directly into the plasma.
Dissolved oxygen can reach areas with poor circulation or damaged small vessels more effectively than standard oxygen delivery.
The goal is to support tissue that is at risk because of hypoxia, such as tissue affected by crush injury, severe infection, radiation damage, or long-standing diabetes.
The sessions usually last between 60 and 120 minutes. Emergency indications may require a small number of closely spaced treatments.
Chronic problems such as diabetic foot ulcers or radiation injury often involve a series of 20–40 sessions, typically delivered on weekdays over several weeks.
When clinicians discuss the benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy, they are considering specific problems where extra oxygen, delivered under pressure, alters the expected outcome.
The points below highlight ten areas where HBOT has clear medical use.
HBOT helps clear carbon monoxide from the blood faster than standard oxygen therapy.
That matters if you or a loved one has been exposed to smoke or faulty heaters and you want to lower the chance of lasting brain symptoms.
Pressurized oxygen shrinks gas bubbles and improves blood flow again. This is critical for divers, patients after specific procedures, or anyone who accidentally inhales air into the bloodstream.
Crush injuries and acute limb ischemia put arms and legs at real risk for amputation.
HBOT can support borderline tissue while surgeons and vascular specialists work on restoring circulation.
Diabetic foot ulcers and other non-healing wounds often stall because the tissue never gets enough oxygen.
HBOT raises local oxygen levels so collagen, tiny blood vessels, and immune cells can do their jobs more effectively.
Radiation for head and neck, pelvic, or breast cancers can leave bone and soft tissue fragile years later.
HBOT may help those areas heal more effectively, especially when surgery or dental work is required in previously irradiated zones.
Necrotizing infections progress rapidly and typically occur in tissue with a poor oxygen supply.
HBOT does not replace surgery or antibiotics, but it can make the tissue less hospitable to bacteria and help the immune system function more effectively.
Chronic osteomyelitis can persist even with effective antibiotics and debridement. HBOT can improve blood flow and oxygenation inside bones, allowing drugs and immune cells to reach the infection more effectively.
When a graft or flap starts to appear dusky instead of pink, oxygen delivery is usually the underlying issue.
HBOT can support that tissue while the surgical team addresses any mechanical or vascular problems.
Some instances of sudden deafness or acute loss of vision from retinal artery blockage are time-sensitive. HBOT, added early to standard treatment, aims to preserve as much function as possible in the inner ear or retina.
When hemoglobin levels are critically low, and transfusion is delayed or not possible, HBOT can carry extra oxygen dissolved in plasma.
That temporary support can help keep organs stable while definitive treatment is arranged.
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is not a cure-all, but in the right situation, it can protect tissue, change the course of a wound, or support recovery after severe injury.
The hard part is determining whether your specific condition actually falls into that category.
If you’re living with a poorly healing wound, radiation-related tissue damage, sudden hearing or vision changes, or lingering problems after serious illness or injury, you don’t have to guess.
Our team at Universal Neurological Care can review your medical history, current scans, and prior treatments, then provide a clear opinion on whether HBOT is a suitable addition to your care plan or if another approach is more appropriate.
Short-term issues usually include ear or sinus pressure, temporary stuffy nose, mild fatigue after sessions, and, in some patients, short-lived nearsightedness that resolves over time.
Emergency cases may need only a few urgent treatments. Chronic problems like diabetic foot ulcers or radiation injury often require 20–40 sessions, usually 5 days a week, with each visit lasting about 60–120 minutes.
People with a collapsed lung (pneumothorax), certain chronic lung diseases, uncontrolled fever or active ear/sinus infection, and most pregnant patients should not receive HBOT outside very narrow situations (such as severe CO poisoning). Anyone with implanted devices or a seizure history needs careful review before treatment.





