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Preliminary Clinical Study On Ms Treatment With Hyperbaric Oxygenation Cover

Preliminary Clinical Study On Ms Treatment With Hyperbaric Oxygenation

Open Access
|Nov 2015

Abstract

The authors conducted the preliminary clinical investigation on 16 multiple sclerosis (Sclerosis multiplex) patients of median disease duration 9.33 years and symptoms evaluated on Kurtzke’s scale. The patients underwent between 25 and 30 hyperbaric oxygen exposures at a pressure of 2 ata in intervals spread over a few days. The patients were qualified and classified to the treatment symptomatologically according to Fisher but the obtained results were evaluated according to the standardised Disability Status Scale by Kurtzke. During the investigations the authors carried out additional quantitative immunoglobulin and complement activity determination, lymphocyte T and B determinations as well as the usually applied clinical and laboratory investigations. Evident clinical improvement was observed in 14 patients, but in the case of one patient a deterioration was observed after 15 hyperbaric expositions (resulting in the hyperbaric oxygen treatment being stopped), whilst in another case no curative effect could be observed. By utilising the 50% haemolysis method, within the examined immunological parameters the authors observed an increase of complement fractions and its activity, white lymphocytes T and B examined qualitatively did not maintain the characteristic shift. The authors are still discussing the obtained results.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/phr-2015-0010 | Journal eISSN: 2084-0535 | Journal ISSN: 1734-7009
Language: English
Page range: 47 - 51
Accepted on: Jun 2, 2014
Published on: Nov 18, 2015
Published by: Polish Hyperbaric Medicine and Technology Society
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2015 Kazimierz Ulewicz, Janusz Masłowski, Przemysław Michniewski, Brunon Kierznikowicz, Romuald Olszański, published by Polish Hyperbaric Medicine and Technology Society
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.