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The Department of Emergency Medicine directs the UK Hospital
HBOT Service. The treatment facility is located adjacent to the
Emergency Department. Dr Charles Eckerline is the medical director
and, along with the other Emergency Medicine faculty, supervises patient treatment.
LaDawn Reynolds is the full-time hyperbaric technician and provides
weekday scheduled patient treatments. Glenda Hale, Debbie Sublett,
and Jerry Sherrow provide after-hours hyperbaric technician
coverage for emergency treatments.
The HBOT service uses a Sechrist monoplace chamber capable of
pressures to 3.0 ATA (atmospheres absolute or 66 psi). The chamber
has the capability of cardiac rhythm monitoring, intravenous
infusions, mechanical ventilation, and air breaks for patients
undergoing treatment. The service provides scheduled treatments
Monday through Friday, between 8:00 am and 4:00 pm. Emergency
treatments are provided on an on-call basis. Currently, the
program provides over 500 treatments per year.
The HBOT service follows the approved uses of hyperbaric
treatment as developed by the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical
Society and the approved indications for hyperbaric treatment as
established by Medicare. In these conditions, there is clinical
evidence of benefit with HBOT. These conditions are:
- Acute carbon monoxide intoxication
- Decompression illness (dysbarism)
- Air or gas embolism
- Gas gangrene (clostridial myonecrosis)
- Acute traumatic peripheral ischemia
- Crush injuries and repair of severed limbs
- Progressive necrotizing infections (necrotizing fasciitis)
- Acute peripheral arterial insufficiency / exceptional blood
loss
- Treatment of compromised skin flaps and grafts
- Chronic refractory osteomyelitis
- Osteoradionecrosis
- Enhancement of healing in selected problem wounds
- Soft tissue radionecrosis
- Radiation cystitis
- Cyanide poisoning
- Intracranial abcess
It is the policy of the UK Hospital HBOT service that only
patients with an accepted or approved indication will be treated.
Treatment of patients for other reasons will only be done using an
IRB approved research protocol.
The majority of scheduled patients treated by the UK HBOT
service have either osteoradionecrosis or soft tissue
radionecrosis and typically undergo 30 to 40 treatments over 6 to
8 weeks. Emergency patients are generally severe carbon monoxide
intoxication and undergo 1 to 2 treatments. Most treatments last
90 to 120 minutes and utilize pressures of 2.0 to 2.5 ATA.
Absolute
contraindications to HBOT include:
- Untreated pneumothorax
- Recent doxorubicin administration (within one week)
- Daily disulfiram treatment
- Current cis-plantinum therapy
- Current mafenide therapy
Relative contraindications to HBOT include:
- Current sinusitis
- Seizure disorder
- Emphysema with CO2 retention
- History of spontaneous pneumothorax
- History of surgery for otosclerosis
- History of optic neuritis
To refer a patient for potential HBOT:
- Routine referral for scheduled outpatients: call the
department office at 859-323-5908 and request a HBOT
consultation.
- Emergency referrals: call UKMDs at 859-257-6845 and ask for
the Emergency Department Attending.
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