Guest guest Posted May 12, 2005 Report Share Posted May 12, 2005 This is what I found; Ohio Hyperbaric Oxygen Unit Akron General Medical Center 400 Wabash Avenue Akron OH 44307 24 HR #: 330 384-6111 CHAMBER #: 330 384-6823 OFFICE #: 330 384-6823 Mercy Medical Center 1320 Mercy Drive, N.W. Canton Ohio44708 Phone:(330) 489-1393 Fax:(330) 430-6989 # Cincinnati Hyperbarics 11974 Lebanon Rd. Suite 228 Cincinnati, Oh. 45241 513-563-4321 www.cincinnatihyperbarics.com Dayton Heart Hospital Gerri , RN Wound Center 707 Edwin C. Moses Blvd Dayton OH 45408 937 332-8555 email: gerrijohnson@... Doctor's Hospital Wound Healing Center 400 Austin Avenue, N.W. Massilon OH 44646 330 830-2561 Wound Healing and Hyperbaric Medicine Center 4881 Sugar Maple Dr Bld 830 -, Ohio 45424 Phone:937 257-8603 Fax:937 257-8602 University of Cincinnati Center For Hyperbaric Medicine Cincinnati OH 45219-0812 24 HR #: 513 584-4262 CHAMBER #: 513 584-0221 OFFICE #: 513 584-4262 St. Charity Hospital 2351 E. 22nd Street Cleveland OH 44115 24 HR #: 216 363-2536 CHAMBER #: 216 363-3315 OFFICE #: 216 363-2576 Ohio State University Emergency Dept-Hyperbaric Unit 410 W. 10th Avenue , S93RH Columbus OH 43210 24 HR #: 614 293-8333 CHAMBER #: 614 293-5551 TotalWound Treatment Center Lima Memorial Hospital 1001 Bellefontaine Avenue Lima, Ohio 45804 Phone:419-998-4410 Fax:419-998-4411 The Toledo Hospital, Dept. of Hyperbaric Medicine Address: 2142 North Cove Blvd. Toledo, Ohio, 43606 Phone: 419-291-2072 Fax: 419-291-6456 Email: georgia.siebenaler@... ----- Original Message ----- From: " Greg " <gregoryjphillips@...> < > Sent: Wednesday, May 11, 2005 10:25 AM Subject: [ ] Re: HBOT in NE Ohio Hi Roxanne: HBOT stands for hyperbaric oxygen therapy. It's been around for decades, and is Medicare-covered for some ailments (though, needless to say, not autism). Basically, it's a medical treatment in which you go into a pressurized room/chamber and breath 100% pure oxygen for an hour or so. It's used to treat injuries that manifest a chronic, inflammatory process, such as sport injuries, diabetics facing foot amputations, etc. It's increasingly being used for chronic brain injuries, and there was testimony before Congress last May about its potential use in autism. Some parents of ASD kids have started using HBOT and noted improvement; others can't say one way or the other. Kind of like everything we do. HBOT appeals to me theoretically because of the research out of s Hopkins earlier this year that clearly found a chronic inflammatory process in the autopsies of autistic brains, resulting from over- activation of the microglial cells. To me at least, treatments designed to stop that ongoing inflammatory process are of paramount interest. I've heard of no adverse effects from HBOT, though I'm still researching it. There are other DAN practitioners who are starting to offer it, such as Jeff Bradstreet down in Florida. I just talked to at Dr. Lonsdale's office. $200/session. Ouch. And no volume discounts. Hope this helps, Greg > > In a message dated 5/11/2005 9:14:22 AM Eastern Standard Time, > gregoryjphillips@y... writes: > > Has anyone looked into HBOT providers in NE Ohio? I know that Dr. > Lonsdale now has a chamber, but I'm trying to get a sense of what's > out there and pricing. > > > > What is " HBOT? " > > > Roxanna ô¿ö > Autism Happens Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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