HBOT is a good alternative therapy for breast cancer patients who have experienced breast tissue damage as a side effect of radiation treatment. It can also be used for the treatment of breast pain associated with radiation therapy. If you are looking for HBOT therapy near you, contact us!
HBOT is a good alternative therapy for breast cancer patients who have experienced breast tissue damage as a side effect of radiation treatment. It can also be used for the treatment of breast pain associated with radiation therapy. If you are looking for HBOT therapy near you, contact us!
Warm & friendly, Joyce had a discolored patch about the size of a silver dollar on her breast. It was pale skin in striking contrast to the rest of her breast, which was a beautiful coffee color.
She said the patch was still painful, and could not raise her arm above her shoulder. It just hurt too much. Thirty treatments of HBOT, and she could swing her arm in every direction, even above her head. The discolored, painful patch had healed up and disappeared. Her skin was smooth; best of all, it felt normal and didn’t hurt.
Amelia was a lovely and lively 72 year old poet and world traveler. However, radiation treatments from several years past had slowly destroyed the skin tissue and her underlying rib.
She had had two different surgeons try to close the hole that had appeared beside her nipple. The skin was fragile and would not regrow. She had 40 hyperbaric treatments, which regrew the skin and layers of breast tissue underneath
Mary was a grateful, passionate, dedicated nurse who loved playing the piano. Seven years after a double mastectomy and radiation without reconstructive surgery, Mary had a patch of skin on the right side of her chest that kept thinning due to breast tissue damage.
By the time we saw her, the skin had worn away, leaving a weeping patch of underlying tissue. The area was the size of her hand. She kept covering it with gauze and tape. It didn’t hurt, but the dripping was annoying, and it could get infected, which was dangerous for her and her patients. Also, the patch grew bigger as the skin cells continued to die. This was a side effect of the radiation. The skin grew back with 40 treatments. Mary was happily able to continue her nursing career.