What types of injuries and ailments can be treated?
Breeding: HBOT helps the uterus return to
normal size and shape following foaling, and dummy foals improve with increased
blood flow to the brain. The therapy has also been reported to increase libido
in aging stallions.
Anemia or blood loss: For horses that are anemic and
those that have lost a large volume of blood because of injury or surgery, HBOT
allows the remaining blood to carry a larger amount of oxygen, sustaining body
functions while more blood is being produced.
Bone infection: HBOT increases the oxygen
concentration in all body tissues including bone and bone marrow. Bone
infections that have not responded to traditional antibiotic therapy often
clear up after treatment in the hyperbaric chamber. Joint infections in foals
also respond well to this therapy.
Wounds in skin and muscle tissue: Improved oxygen delivery and
stimulation of capillary formation assist in healing, especially in skin
grafts, amputations, ulcerated wounds, and injuries where tissues have been
crushed and circulation has been destroyed or impaired.
Laminitis: By enhancing oxygen delivery and
minimizing inflammation and swelling, HBOT can dramatically minimize the
destruction of tissue structures within the hoof.
Post-surgical
equine patients: Horses recovering from colic surgery and other procedures
benefit from HBOT to oxygenate damaged tissues, restore blood flow, and reduce
swelling.
Connective
tissue injuries: Torn ligament and bowed tendons heal more quickly when HBOT
is included in treatment.
The goal
is to use HBOT to shorten the recovery time for injuries and illnesses. The
final results desired include improved survival rates for serious conditions,
faster healing, less time spent in the hospital, and a healthier horse overall.
Veterinarians are using HBOT to treat the following conditions:
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is also
potentially beneficial for athletic and non-athletic injuries or ailments, including:
- Improved rate and degree of recovery in equine athletes
- Improved well-being and demeanor
- Desmitis (ligament disease)
- Tendonitis (bowed or diseased tendons)
- Fractures
- Exercise-induced
pulmonary hemorrhaging (Bleeders)
- Acute laminitis (Founder)
- Reperfusion diseases
(severe muscle damage, crush injuries)
- Colic (intestinal
obstruction, colonic torsions, volvulus, etc.)
- Enteritis and endotoxemia
- Ileus (loss of intestinal
motility)
- Infertility (mare and
stallion)
- Rhodococcus pneumonia in
foals
- Lyme disease
- Osteomyelitis (bone
infection)
- Compromised wounds
- Myositis (tying up)
- Septic arthritis (joint
infections)
- Neurologic disease
- Severe necrosis (e.g.
snake and spider bites, toxic substances, etc.)
- Neonatal maladjustment
syndrome
- Lung and abdominal
abscesses
- Gastric ulcer healing.
Prevention of ischemia reperfusion injury post colon
torsion
- Any intestinal ischemic
- Exercise cise-induced
pulmonary hemorrhage
- Post-race or post performance recovery
- Post-race or post performance recovery
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