Recompression Therapy

(Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy)

ByRichard E. Moon, MD, Duke University Medical Center
Reviewed/Revised Apr 2023
VIEW PROFESSIONAL VERSION

Recompression therapy involves giving 100% oxygen for several hours in a sealed chamber at high pressures (at least 1.9 atmospheres).

    (See also Overview of Diving Injuries.)

    Recompression therapy has four effects on the blood that can be useful in treating diving injuries:

    • Increasing the concentration of oxygen

    • Decreasing the concentration of nitrogen

    • Decreasing the concentration of carbon monoxide

    • Decreasing the size of gas bubbles

    • Decreasing inflammation (anti-inflammatory effect)

    Among divers, recompression therapy is used most often for decompression sickness and arterial gas embolism, but it also may be used to treat carbon monoxide poisoning.

    Treatment in a hyperbaric chamber with oxygen therapy is often referred to as hyperbaric oxygen therapy when it is given primarily to administer high concentrations of oxygen rather than to treat decompression sickness or arterial gas embolism. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is used for several disorders unrelated to diving.

    Disorders Treated With Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy

    Treatment with hyperbaric oxygen therapy seems to benefit people with some disorders. These include

    It is less clear whether treatment with hyperbaric oxygen therapy helps people with other disorders, and studies in these disorders are still being done:

    • Brain abscess and infection caused by actinomycosis

    • Severe anemia and very low blood pressure due to blood loss when transfusion is not possible

    The sooner recompression therapy for decompression sickness is begun, the better the result is likely to be. However, recompression may be helpful even if started up to several days after surfacing. Some chambers have room for more than one person and some have room for only one. Treatments are usually given once or twice daily for up to 300 minutes. Most often, 100% oxygen is given at 2.5 to 3 atmospheres of pressure.

    During pregnancy a single recompression treatment for an acute illness such as decompression sickness or carbon monoxide poisoning is generally considered safe. However, multiple hyperbaric oxygen treatments are usually avoided during pregnancy because of possible harmful effects of high oxygen concentrations on the fetus. Recompression therapy can cause problems similar to those that occur with barotrauma. It can also cause temporary nearsightedness, low blood sugar levels (hypoglycemia), or rarely, toxic effects on the lungs or seizures.

    People with a collapsed lung (pneumothorax) may require a chest tube (thoracostomy) before recompression therapy.

    Information regarding the location of the nearest recompression chamber, the most rapid means of reaching it, and the most appropriate source to consult by telephone should be known by most divers. Such information is also available from the Divers Alert Network (919-684-9111) or Duke Dive Medicine (919-684-8111) 24 hours per day.

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