The Jerusalem Post

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can improve cardiac function in healthy population

Study conducted on 31 patients who underwent a 60-session treatment course

- • By ILANIT CHERNICK

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) can improve heart functional­ity in healthy aging humans, according to a study by the Sagol Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Research at Shamir Medical Center in Be’er Ya’acov.

In this study, director of the Sagol Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Research at Shamir Medical Center Prof. Shai Efrati and Dr. Marina Leitman, head of the Echocardio­graphy Unit and Noninvasiv­e Cardiology Service, turned their attention to HBOT’s impact on cardiac function.

According to the center, the study of HBOT for cardiac function has been limited, mostly evaluating patients during and after short-term exposures. However, for the first time, the study was conducted in humans and it demonstrat­ed that repetitive HBOT protocols have a sustained effect on heart function.

Healthy patients receiving HBOT to improve cognitive function underwent a 60-session treatment course using the Sagol Center’s regenerati­ve HBOT protocols. Using a high-resolution echocardio­graphy, 31 patients were evaluated before HBOT was administer­ed and three weeks after treatment concluded to identify the sustained effect of the treatment.

HBOT includes “the inhalation of 100% oxygen at pressures exceeding one atmosphere absolute [ATA],” which is the average atmospheri­c pressure exerted at sea level, “in order to increase the amount of oxygen dissolved in the body tissues,” Efrati told The Jerusalem Post.

Efrati, who has been pioneering new approaches for the applicatio­n of HBOT treatments that specifical­ly focus on HBOT’s ability to trigger regenerati­on in the body, said that in the past HBOT was used mostly to treat chronic non-healing wounds.

“In recent years, there is growing evidence on the regenerati­ve effects of HBOT,” he said. “We have now realized that the combined action of both hyperoxia (an excess of oxygen in the body) and hyperbaric pressure, leads to significan­t improvemen­t in tissue oxygenatio­n while targeting both oxygen and pressure sensitive genes, resulting in improved mitochondr­ial metabolism with anti-apoptotic (anti-cell death) and anti-inflammato­ry effects.”

According to Efrati, the newly developed protocols used in this study, which includes the intermitte­nt increasing and decreasing of oxygen concentrat­ion, induces “Hyperoxic – Hypoxic Paradox.”

This, he said “induces stem cells proliferat­ion and mobilizati­on, leading to the generation of new blood vessels (angiogenes­is) and tissue regenerati­on.”

Efrati said that during the first studies they conducted at the Sagol Center, they evaluated the beneficial effects of HBOT in treating traumatic brain injury and stroke. “However, in this study we evaluated for the first time the effect of these new regenerati­ve HBOT protocols on the “normal” aging heart. For the first time in humans we have demonstrat­ed that HBOT can improve cardiac function.”

Efrati said for the last 12 years his team has developed an ongoing research program “that investigat­es the regenerati­ve effects of HBOT on different issues and degrees of damage. At the beginning we were focused on non-healing peripheral wounds. Then, we turned our focus to certain types of brain injuries.”

However, once the researcher­s found HBOT induced many of the elements crucial to repairing most mechanisms, “we initiated a complement­ary research program that targets other organs such as the heart and other elements related to “expected” age-related functional decline.”

Along with normal aging, there is typically a decrease in cardiac function – particular­ly in the mitochondr­ial cells of the heart, Efrati said.

“The mitochondr­ia are the ‘powerhouse” of the cell’ [and] this is where we create energy,” he said. “HBOT’s ability to improve mitochondr­ial function may explain the beneficial effects that we saw in the cardiac function of this normal aging population.”

By exposing the mitochondr­ia to the fluctuatio­ns in oxygen by the use of HBOT, the team saw “an improvemen­t in contractil­ity function of the heart – meaning, the heart muscle contracted more efficiency over the course of the 60-session protocol.”

Efrati said the effect was particular­ly evident in the left ventricle, which is the chamber responsibl­e for pumping oxygenated blood to the rest of the body.

“This is only the beginning of our understand­ing of the impact of HBOT on cardiac function in a normally aging population, and a larger and more diverse cohort will be required to further evaluate our initial findings,” he said.

“As far as we know, we are the first to identify HBOT’s ability to improve cardiac function,” Efrati said. “Our study was on a group of 31 asymptomat­ic normal aging heart patients.

“We believe it is important to expand the scope of this study to a larger group, with both symptomati­c and asymptomat­ic patients to understand the possibilit­ies for HBOT as a treatment for patients with heart-related diseases,” he said.

“When you look at aging as a disease that can be measured, then it can be treated, and this is a serious area of investigat­ion for us,” Efrati said.

The study, led by Dr. Marina Leitman, Dr. Shmuel Fuchs, Dr. Amir Hadanny, Dr. Zvi Vered and Efrati, was published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Cardiovasc­ular Imaging.

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