Acha news letter

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1 Mobile Hyperbaric Care for your client’s best friend or working companion By All Creatures Hyperbaric Care LLC Mobile climate controlled Hyperbaric Care for your animal client. ALL CREATURES HYPERBARIC CARE Life Saving, Healing Chambers bring new hope for animals and their owners. Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) is an important tool in Human medicine and now is available and affordable in veterinary medicine, for all animals. The application possibilities for this treatment modality are endless. This is a do no harm, conjunctive and stand alone therapy that is pain free and will change and save your client’s lives. The side effects of HBOT are rare. Elevating tissue oxygenation using HBOT promotes natural healing and recovery will take place at an accelerated rate. www.hbottogo.com 254-913-7476 24/7 254-722-1037 EDEMIA * HYPOXIA * ISCHEMIA * INFECTION Hyperbaric Oxygen addresses all of theses issues and much more

Transcript of Acha news letter

Page 1: Acha news letter

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Mobile Hyperbaric Care for your client’s best friend or working companion By All Creatures Hyperbaric Care LLC

Mobile climate controlled Hyperbaric Care for your animal client.

ALL CREATURES HYPERBARIC CARE

Life Saving, Healing Chambers bring new hope for animals and their owners.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) is an important tool in Human medicine and now is available and affordable in veterinary medicine, for all animals.

The application possibilities for this treatment modality are endless. This is a do no harm, conjunctive and stand alone therapy that is pain free and will change and save your client’s lives. The side effects of HBOT are rare.

Elevating tissue oxygenation using HBOT promotes natural healing and recovery will take place at an accelerated rate.

www.hbottogo.com 254-913-7476 24/7 254-722-1037

EDEMIA * HYPOXIA * ISCHEMIA * INFECTION Hyperbaric Oxygen addresses all of theses issues and much more

Page 2: Acha news letter

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Mobile Hyperbaric Care for your client’s best friend or working companion By All Creatures Hyperbaric Care LLC

Mobile climate controlled Hyperbaric Care for your animal client.

ALL CREATURES HYPERBARIC CARE

Life Saving, Healing Chambers bring new hope for animals and their owners.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) is an important tool in Human medicine and now is available and affordable in veterinary medicine, for all animals.

The application possibilities for this treatment modality are endless. This is a do no harm, conjunctive and stand alone therapy that is pain free and will change and save your client’s lives. The side effects of HBOT are rare.

Elevating tissue oxygenation using HBOT promotes natural healing and recovery will take place at an accelerated rate.

www.hbottogo.com 254-913-7476 24/7 254-722-1037

EDEMIA * HYPOXIA * ISCHEMIA * INFECTION Hyperbaric Oxygen addresses all of theses issues and much more

Page 3: Acha news letter

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) in veterinary medicine is the same as in human medicine and is designed to most efficiently deliver oxygen to tissues in the body. This is especially beneficial in challenging cases of wound healing, sepsis, pancreatitis and stroke, as well as crush and burn injuries and spinal cord trauma. By providing a negative environment for anaerobic bacteria, HBOT reduces infection, while promoting angiogenesis in areas of deficient vascularization, which is critical in overcoming radiation injuries.The patient is placed into the chamber where 100% oxygen flows to a maximum of 2 atmospheric pressure. Monitored by staff members at all times using flat-screen television monitors and portholes, most patients require no sedation and remain calm and relaxed during treatment. Lasting about one hour, treatments are generally given one to two times daily.You've probably heard of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) -- its healing powers are well known in the human medical community. Hyperbaric means "under pressure higher than normal at sea level." Patients are exposed to high-pressure oxygen in a specially designed hyperbaric chamber, and the treatment effectively oxygenizes the body's tissues.Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is often used in combination with other forms of therapy to treat injuries and illnesses including wounds and burns, post-surgical swelling, sepsis, pancreatitis, necrosis, and stroke. It reduces swelling and inflammation, eases pressure and edema caused by head or spinal cord injuries, stimulates new blood vessel formation in healing tissues, improves control of infection, and promotes wound healing.forces oxygen into areas that aren't getting an adequate oxygen supply because of tissue damage and swelling. This, revives the immune system and “supercharges” the antibiotics.

Hyperbaric Chamber by Shutterstock.com.Medicare has recognized its validity and therapeutic properties for 20 years. Only recently, however, has veterinary medicine harnessed that healing power for pets.

Calusa Veterinary Center in Boca Raton, Florida, was among the first animal hospital in the nation to acquire a hyperbaric chamber, which is more compact than ones for humans. "Treatment times last about one hour and are given one or two times daily," says Calusa's Dr. Andrew Turkell. "Most patients require no sedation and remain calm and relaxed during the treatment." The animals safely and painlessly inhale and absorb the oxygen Under hyperbaric pressure, healing oxygenation is able to reach damaged tissue three to four times faster than normally transferred by red blood cells," he says. "The more oxygen that is delivered to tissues, the faster healing is achieved. This increased oxygen supply greatly benefits damaged, swollen, and inflamed tissues."

Dogs undergoing stem cell regeneration therapy can also benefit enormously from the treatment. Studies show that hyperbaric oxygen stimulates stem cell growth up to a whopping eight times their normal volume. "The future is bright for our ability to treat diseases which up to now were not part of our protocols, such as diabetes and kidney disease," Turkell says. At Calusa, a dog who was blinded in an anesthesia accident during a routine spay procedure at another hospital had her sight restored after 30 hyperbaric oxygen treatments.

Sofie the Yorkie, now 7 months old, came to Calusa two months ago in bad shape, reports her owner, Corinne Scholtz. A prior consultation with a veterinary neurologist was grim; the doctor had suggested that euthanasia would be the kindest option. "She couldn't see or hear; she had acute brain trauma," Corinne recalls. "She had lost sensation in her paws, and she couldn't eat or go to the bathroom on her own. She was bumping into things. I was devastated."

But Corinne wasn't ready to give up. At Calusa, Sofie began to show improvement after five "dives" (as sessions in the oxygen chamber are called, because the conditions in there are the same as on a scuba dive). "She seemed stronger and less tentative, and she made her way to the food bowl by herself. We're now on our 33rd treatment, and I think Sofie is healthier now than before she was injured! She's a functioning, happy dog. HBOT saved

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You've probably heard of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) -- its healing powers are well known in the human medical community. Hyperbaric means "under pressure higher than normal at sea level." Patients are exposed to high-pressure oxygen in a specially designed hyperbaric chamber, and the treatment effectively oxygenizes the body's tissues.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is often used in combination with other forms of therapy to treat injuries and illnesses including wounds and burns, post-surgical swelling, sepsis, pancreatitis, necrosis, and stroke. It reduces swelling and inflammation, eases pressure and edema caused by head or spinal cord injuries, stimulates new blood vessel formation in healing tissues, improves control of infection, and promotes wound healing.

Hyperbaric Chamber by Shutterstock.com.Medicare has recognized its validity and therapeutic properties for 20 years. Only recently, however, has veterinary medicine harnessed that healing power for pets.

Calusa Veterinary Center in Boca Raton, Florida, was among the first animal hospital in the nation to acquire a hyperbaric chamber, which is more compact than ones for humans. "Treatment times last about one hour and are given one or two times daily," says Calusa's Dr. Andrew Turkell. "Most patients require no sedation and remain calm and relaxed during the treatment." The animals safely and painlessly inhale and absorb the oxygen.

Lancey in a hyberbaric chamber."Under hyperbaric pressure, healing oxygenation is able to reach damaged tissue three to four times faster than normally transferred by red blood cells," he says. "The more oxygen that is delivered to tissues, the faster healing is achieved. This increased oxygen supply greatly benefits damaged, swollen, and inflamed tissues."

Dogs undergoing stem cell regeneration therapy can also benefit enormously from the treatment. Studies show that hyperbaric oxygen stimulates stem cell growth up to a whopping eight times their normal volume. "The future is bright for our ability to treat diseases which up to now were not part of our protocols, such as diabetes and kidney disease," Turkell says. At Calusa, a dog who was blinded in an anesthesia accident during a routine spay procedure at another hospital had her sight restored after 30 hyperbaric oxygen treatments.

Sofie the Yorkie, now 7 months old, came to Calusa two months ago in bad shape, reports her owner, Corinne Scholtz. A prior consultation with a veterinary neurologist was grim; the doctor had suggested that

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You've probably heard of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) -- its healing powers are well known in the human medical community. Hyperbaric means "under pressure higher than normal at sea level." Patients are exposed to high-pressure oxygen in a specially designed hyperbaric chamber, and the treatment effectively oxygenizes the body's tissues.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is often used in combination with other forms of therapy to treat injuries and illnesses including wounds and burns, post-surgical swelling, sepsis, pancreatitis, necrosis, and stroke. It reduces swelling and inflammation, eases pressure and edema caused by head or spinal cord injuries, stimulates new blood vessel formation in healing tissues, improves control of infection, and promotes wound healing.

Hyperbaric Chamber by Shutterstock.com.Medicare has recognized its validity and therapeutic properties for 20 years. Only recently, however, has veterinary medicine harnessed that healing power for pets.

Calusa Veterinary Center in Boca Raton, Florida, was among the first animal hospital in the nation to acquire a hyperbaric chamber, which is more compact than ones for humans. "Treatment times last about one hour and are given one or two times daily," says Calusa's Dr. Andrew Turkell. "Most patients require no sedation and remain calm and relaxed during the treatment." The animals safely and painlessly inhale and absorb the oxygen.

Lancey in a hyberbaric chamber."Under hyperbaric pressure, healing oxygenation is able to reach damaged tissue three to four times faster than normally transferred by red blood cells," he says. "The more oxygen that is delivered to tissues, the faster healing is achieved. This increased oxygen supply greatly benefits damaged, swollen, and inflamed tissues."

Dogs undergoing stem cell regeneration therapy can also benefit enormously from the treatment. Studies show that hyperbaric oxygen stimulates stem cell growth up to a whopping eight times their normal volume. "The future is bright for our ability to treat diseases which up to now were not part of our protocols, such as diabetes and kidney disease," Turkell says. At Calusa, a dog who was blinded in an anesthesia accident during a routine spay procedure at another hospital had her sight restored after 30 hyperbaric oxygen treatments.

Sofie the Yorkie, now 7 months old, came to Calusa two months ago in bad shape, reports her owner, Corinne Scholtz. A prior consultation with a veterinary neurologist was grim; the doctor had suggested that euthanasia would be the kindest option. "She couldn't see or hear; she had

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You've probably heard of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) -- its healing powers are well known in the human medical community. Hyperbaric means "under pressure higher than normal at sea level." Patients are exposed to high-pressure oxygen in a specially designed hyperbaric chamber, and the treatment effectively oxygenizes the body's tissues.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is often used in combination with other forms of therapy to treat injuries and illnesses including wounds and burns,