Vancouver study of stroke survivors between 19 and 85 to use hyperbaric chamber

VANCOUVER – Doctors at Vancouver General Hospital are recruiting stroke survivors to determine if increasing the amount of oxygen in the body improves conditions such as depression and cognitive skills.

The Vancouver Coastal Health Authority says the first such study in North America will involve patients lying in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber for 40 treatments, each lasting about two hours.

Dr. David Harrison, the lead investigator and medical manager of the hyperbaric unit at VGH, says the study will also measure daily activities.

His team is seeking 140 patients, between the ages of 19 and 85, who have had a stroke involving the cerebral hemisphere during the past six to 36 months.

Hyperbaric oxygen treatment involves breathing 100 per cent oxygen at increased pressures inside a cylindrical chamber, which allows oxygen to be dissolved into the bloodstream and carried to the organs.

Preliminary results of the study are expected in December 2018.

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