Scott Bein - Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy
In this episode of Prescribed Listening from The University of Toledo Medical Center, Program Director of Hyperbaric Medicine Scott Bein, discusses the benefits of hyperbaric treatment. UTMC's Wound and Hyperbaric Center includes board-certified physicians, nurses and other health-care professionals, certified in the management of wound care and hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
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Transcript
Voiceover:
Welcome to Prescribed Listening from the University of Toledo Medical Center, each
week UTMC providers sharing insight into their medical specialty. This week, Scott
Bein.
Scott Bein:
My name is Scott Bein, I'm the program director for the Hyperbaric Medicine Department
here at University of Toledo Medical Center. I've been here for about five years now
and have developed this program to what it stands today, and we are treating wonderful,
wonderful patients so they can get back on with their life and keep their standard
of life to the way it was before they got their ulceration.
Scott Bein:
I became involved in hyperbaric medicine when I went to college in San Diego. I actually
started going to school in a trade school for commercial diving. So I was really involved
in scuba diving, I have thousands of dives under my belt, and hyperbaric medicine
follows the same gas laws, physics, as scuba diving, and I thought commercial diving
would have been right up my alley, and it was. I loved it, I'd go back and do it again.
After a bit of time I did injure my knee and I was not able to do commercial diving,
and followed up with hyperbaric medicine.
Scott Bein:
My first job was all the way across the country in Oregon, and wound up taking a position
here as the program director, and never regretted it a moment in my life. It was fantastic.
I absolutely loved the science behind it, it's all physics and science, it's all gas
laws and equations, to make sure that the patients receive the treatment that they're
ordered for, and to make sure they're safe and they go home every single day. That
is what my job is, and that's what I love about it.
Scott Bein:
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is an oxygen treatment under pressure. This has been around
since 1667. A clergyman by the name of Henshaw in England discovered that different
atmospheric pressures surrounding the body has different tangible healing properties.
Back then they were just doing pressurized air, and it wasn't until late 18, early
1900s where they started introducing oxygen, and it actually became a medical modality
back in the forties, thirties and forties. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is a great modality
for ulcerations, radiation, and bone infections that will not heal over a 30 day period.
So it's a great and fantastic idea that's been around forever, but today with modern
science, we've been actually able to precision the treatment per patient to exactly
what they need.
Scott Bein:
So the process of hyperbaric oxygen therapy is our patients will sit inside the chamber,
the chamber will be pressurized to two atmospheric pressures. So it's the same pressure
as you would feel if you're scuba diving to 40 feet of salt water. Now obviously there's
no water involved, it's all air pressure. Once we reach the pressure, the patient
now wears a oxygen delivery hood, it's a clear vinyl hood, and under pressure we can
actually induce, or super saturate the body with oxygen, to an equivalency of 200%.
We're doubling the amount of molecules that can saturate the blood plasma within the
body itself. Now normally our oxygen is carried through our red blood cell via the
hemoglobin, and we can saturate that to 100% right here on surface with just a regular
non-rebreather, or a nasal cannular, with 100% oxygen.
Scott Bein:
Inside the chamber we bypass the red blood cell as our oxygen carrier and we diffuse
that oxygen molecule into the plasma of the blood, which is the liquid part of the
blood. Now the plasma of the blood doesn't get stopped by those damaged vessels in
the body that is created by either diabetes, radiation therapy. Because it's a very
dense tissue, bone infections are very, very difficult to get enough oxygen to those
tissues for them to function properly. Inside the chamber, breathing oxygen under
pressure, we can super saturate those areas, get the oxygen to those damaged tissues
downstream of those damaged vessels, and we can regrow new tissue, we can also have
a huge effect on infections and make sure that the new tissue grows the proper amount
of vascularity so when they heal, they stay healed and they don't have to come back,
unless whatever caused the issue the first time causes it again.
Scott Bein:
On a daily basis our indicated patients from the wound care center will come in for
hyperbaric treatment Monday through Friday, they're here for a two hour treatment,
and the treatments are on the average of about 40. So they're here for about two months.
Now within that period they get checked in every day, the doctors come down and check
them out and make sure that they're good to go, and then our trained staff and team
takeover. Inside the chamber is where our patients will sit. This chamber is 10 foot
in diameter, 15 feet long. We can sit up to 10 patients at one time. At all times,
whether we have one patient or up to 10 patients, we always have a staff member inside
the chamber, and this is for safety and comfort, and to ensure that the treatment
is exactly what the patient needs, and is ordered.
Scott Bein:
The difference between multiplace chamber and a monoplace chamber, the treatments
are exactly the same. So when you're delivering 100% oxygen at the exact same pressure,
there is no difference. Here at University of Toledo Medical Center we have the only
multiplace chamber associated with a hospital in Northwest Ohio. Our chamber is pressurized
with air, which is a safer gas mixture, within the treatment timeframe, and all of
our oxygen is delivered by an oxygen hood or an oxygen mask. In a monoplace chamber,
they are pressurized with 100% oxygen, the patient is laying on a gurney or a bed,
and that's the only position they can be in. It is very, very technical at what goes
inside a monoplace chamber because of a risk of fire or an explosion. In our chamber,
much safer, we have a lot more relaxed rules because of the safety percentage that
is built into it, we have staff members inside the chamber at all times, whereas monoplace
the patients in by himself.
Scott Bein:
So on a daily basis here, our majority of indications are chronic non-healing wounds
such as diabetic foot ulcers. Diabetic ulcers of any lower limb, as long as the insurance
will approve it. Those particular indications, the diabetes, has damaged the blood
vessels and we need to rebuild them through angiogenesis and neovascularization, which
hyperbarics creates the environment for that new tissue growth, and for those particular
[dallies 00:07:02] to occur. Now outside of diabetes, the next indication that we
treat most here is radiation, or delayed radiation injuries. So radiation nowadays
is becoming very, very pinpoint accurate, highly effective, but no matter how much
effectiveness we can get it, there's always going to be what they call a scanner field
of radiation outside of the treatment area. Now that scanner field creates damaged
tissues. Now this sometimes takes months, sometimes years to develop those tissues
to break down, but once you're radiated, that area is always subject to radiation
injury from then on out.
Scott Bein:
So the radiation injury itself, or delayed radiation injury itself, is the soft tissue
breaking down over time. Now it can happen in bone tissue as well, but usually that
is a head or neck type of radiation where we're going to see that the most. So soft
tissue radionecrosis is a slow degradation, or necrosis of the skin or soft tissue
due to capillary beds and microvessel breakdown over time. Those ulcers develop usually
30 days or greater after the last treatment and will not go away. Hyperbaric oxygen
therapy creates an environment for the body to actually recognize that there is an
ulceration and start the healing process. Those particular patients are usually the
highest success rates within our hyperbaric therapy due to the fact that all they
really need is just extra oxygen at higher pressures for their body to react correctly
and start that healing process.
Scott Bein:
So the last indication that we normally see within hyperbarics is osteomyelitis, which
is an infection of the bone. After standard care and therapy, such as bone debridement,
surgical intervention, and six weeks of appropriate antibiotics, a lot of these bone
infections are still around, and they will not go away. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy
is indicated at this time due to the fact that hyperbaric oxygen is also a bactericide,
so meaning the high doses of oxygen can get within that tissue and help alleviate
or eliminate the bacteria that's in that bone infection. The nice thing about hyperbarics
and osteomyelitis is high doses of oxygen and antibiotics have a huge synergistic
effect. By themselves antibiotics work great, but certain antibiotics require a certain
amount of oxygen for the antibiotic to work correctly across the cell membrane and
take care of the bacteria, as well as some antibiotics synergistically improve and
have a higher kill rate with oxygen levels being as high as we can administrate them
in hyperbarics.
Scott Bein:
Risks and side effects to hyperbaric medicine, there are some, absolutely, just like
any other medical therapy or medical intervention. The risks are minimal, and they're
only within the hyperbaric chamber itself, those are the ones that we really, really
keep an eye on. It's called oxygen toxicity. At the dosage in which we administer
the oxygen, it's considered a drug. Now drugs do have side effects. We have an acronym
called [inaudible 00:10:31] that we keep an eye on, it's not all inclusive, but it's
something that keeps us on the lookout for an oxygen toxicity event inside the chamber.
Now vision changes, ringing in the ears, nausea, twitching, tingling of the fingertips,
irritability, dizziness are all small signs that the body's natural reaction to saying,
we've had too much, and that's why we have an attendant inside the chamber.
Scott Bein:
The worst case scenario we have what we call an oxygen induced seizure, and that's,
again, why we have the inside observer inside the chamber at all times. Lower blood
sugars also can be an issue within the chamber. Diabetics have to be a 100 milliliters
per deciliter before they go inside the chamber, and that is because they usually
drop, on the average, of 20 points while they're in the chamber. Now over time we
regulate how much each individual patient needs to have before they go in the chamber,
because each one drops at a different rate. Some patients go in and they raise sugar
levels, and some go in and drop sugar levels.
Scott Bein:
No matter if it's a low blood sugar or an oxygen toxicity event, we treat it all the
same. The first thing we do is take off the hood. This lowers the partial pressure
of oxygen within the body itself, and if it's oxygen related, they snap right out
of it, usually within a few minutes. If it's a low blood sugar, we're checking sugars
anyways, that's always the next step. We have capabilities of checking sugars inside
the chamber, and then we also have countermeasures as needed to ensure that the sugar
levels go back up. Inside our chamber there are different issues, but that's why we
have people inside the chamber, and that's why we are trained all the time on those
particular incidences.
Scott Bein:
Now any type of lasting side effect outside the chamber, there is a near-sightedness
that could happen, but it is only temporary. We tell all of our patients about near-sightedness
prior to starting their very first treatment so if they do have corrective lenses,
they don't go out and change their prescription because it's going to go right back
to normal, usually within six weeks after their last treatment. Outside of near-sightedness,
we do have a consent form that every single patient is informed of, is more than happy
to read every single word of it. But I make sure that when I go over the consent form,
they understand not only the side effects, such as near-sightedness, but the inherent
dangers within the chamber that we want to eliminate, or at least reduce to a very,
very low percentage of danger, or eliminate completely.
Scott Bein:
Now these particular types of dangers we eliminate by making sure that nothing goes
in the chamber that is not allowed in the chamber. No battery operated equipment,
no metallic pieces of metal that can cause sparks inside of our chamber, these particular
issues can cause fires because we do have 100% oxygen under pressure within the chamber.
Now just in case something outside of our control happens, the chamber is capable
of a fire suppression system, it is equipped with a fire suppression system. And this
fire suppression system is activated twice a year for annual plan maintenance, and
to make sure that it functions properly. Every one of our staff members actually goes
inside the chamber at these times and experiences that fire deluge sprinkler system
so they know how to act and they know what to experience when that goes off. Our chamber
is the safest chamber in Northwest Ohio, it is the safest chamber due to the fact
that it is a multiplace, we have fire suppression systems, and we always have an inside
trained observer at all times in the chamber.
Scott Bein:
Contraindications, there's only one absolute contraindication, and that is called
an untreated pneumothorax. So any type of collapsed lung or air bubble within the
lung itself, the lung cavity, that cannot be vented, that's the only absolute contraindication.
Outside of that, there are relative contraindications, bleomycin, cisplatin, sulfamylon,
these have to be removed or these drugs have to be stopped before treatment can start.
There are a list of relative contraindications sent as pregnancy, high fevers, sinus
congestion, things like that, that we can alleviate prior to going in, and they're
not as severe.
Scott Bein:
So the relative contraindications, we can still treat people if it's an emergency,
but long-term chronic daily treatments, we have to make sure that these relative contraindications
have been alleviated before they go in the chamber. The reasoning is, is the extra
pressure on the body has different effects on particular types of issues, like sinus
congestion and things like that, it's called trapped gas in those areas, and the pressure
affects those trapped gas pockets in many different ways. But that's why we screen
each and every single patient before they go in the chamber, the doctor listens to
the lungs, looks in the ears, and clears you for treatment for that day, to make sure
that all of these contraindications have been addressed.
Scott Bein:
As for providers, if I were to hope they would take away from this, is hyperbaric
medicine has been around for hundreds of years. It's approved by all insurances for
the appropriate indication. Diabetic foot ulcers, soft tissue and osteoradionecrosis,
radiation cystitis, radiation enteritis, radiation proctitis, osteomyelitis, these
are the ones that we find the largest healing rates with. We have a very, very good
success rate with hyperbaric medicine and these indications. The sooner that the patient
can be seen by the Wound Care Center here at UT, and evaluated for hyperbaric medicine,
the faster the heal rate will be for that patient.
Scott Bein:
Unfortunately, some ulcerations, depending on what causes it, they can have these
ulcerations for years. I actually had a lady at one time, she had an ulceration for
over 12 years before we got her in the chamber, because nobody knew how to take care
of it. She was referred to the Wound Care Center at the time, once evaluated she had
advanced wound care therapy, she was a soft tissue radionecrosis patient. She was
putting the chamber, we did a little over two months with her, and she wound up healing
and moving on. So no matter how much we try, and we want for the patients to heal
outside of wound care, advanced wound care therapy and hyperbaric therapy are sometimes
the only way and the best way to make sure our patients get back to their normal daily
lives outside of regular clinic visits.
Voiceover:
Thank you for listening to Prescribed Listening from the University of Toledo Medical
Center. To learn more about the provider you heard on today's show, visit UTMC.Utoledo.edu.
More Prescribed Listening next week from UTMC.