|
Article
|
Hyperbaric oxygen
(HBO) therapy for acute traumatic cervical spinal cord injury
|
 S Asamoto 1,
H Sugiyama 1, H Doi 1, M Iida 1, T Nagao 2
and K Matsumoto 3
|
|
1Department of
Neurosurgery, Tokyo Metropolitan Ebara Hospital, Tokyo, Japan |
2Department of
Neurology, Tokyo Metropolitan Ebara Hospital, Tokyo, Japan
3Department of
Neurosurgery, Showa University, School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan
|
|
Correspondence to: S Asamoto, Department of Neurosurgery,
Tokyo Metropolitan Ebara Hospital, 4-5-10 Higashi-Yukigaya, Ohta-Ku, Tokyo
145-0065, Japan
|
|
Abstract
|
|
Study design: A retrospective study of spinal cord injury
(SCI) treated with and without hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy.
Objectives: To report on the use of HBO in spinal cord
injury.
Setting: Neurosurgical Unit, Tokyo, Japan.
Methods: Thirty-four cases of hyperextension spinal cord
injury without bone damage and previous history of surgical intervention
were divided into two groups, with (HBO) or without (non-HBO) therapy. The
neurological findings at admission and their outcomes were evaluated by
means of Neurological Cervical Spine Scale (NCSS) and the average
improvement rates in individual groups were compared.
Results: The improvement rate ranged from 100% to 27.3%
with the mean value of 75.2% in the HBO group, while these values were
100%, 25.0% and 65.1% respectively in the non HBO group.
Conclusion: In the HBO group, the improvement rate
indicated effectiveness in acute traumatic cervical spinal cord injury.
Spinal Cord (2000) 38,
538-540.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment