Neubauer Hyperbaric Neurologic Center (original) (raw)

"People should know that many, many neurological cases suffer from a deficit of oxygen, and that most brain dyfunction is similar to an atom bomb attack. There is an epicenter where nothing can be done. Surrounding this is a volume of sleeping, dormant idling nerve cells that are receiving enough oxygen to exist- but not enough to fire electrically. Our forte has been to visualize, digitize, color-code and demonstrate these areas and using these tools to see if HBOT may help viable, yet sleeping brain cells to recover," stated Dr. Neubauer.

"Our mission is to identify what portions of the brain are recoverable, and to assist them in recovering. We were and the first to be able to bring them back through the use of HBOT."

Up to his death in 2007, Dr. Neubauer documented and published remarkable Case Studies, presented his work at World Symposiums, co-founded The American College of Hyperbaric Medicine, and in his own clinic restored lives, improved lives, and gave hope to families whose physicians had no options for them. In 2010 his original center was re-organized and re-outfitted to a state-of-the art outpatient hyperbaric oxygen facility.

For 40 years, NHNC has been a leader in HBOT, committed to scientific standards and stringent, ethical patient care. Not every patient experiences dramatic Case Study results- there is still a variable patient to patient. Though timely therapy is emphasized, there are still those cases where, after HBOT and neurorehabilitation, functionality is re-gained or to some degree improved, decades after a brain injury. For debilitated persons in long-term care, even small gains in functionality greatly reduce costs.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Facilitates Neurorehabilitation

R.A. Neubauer and F. Gerstenbrand, 3rd World Congress in Neurological Rehabilitation

Long-term neurorehabilitation is not readily available or often undertaken. Minimal therapy may be performed to prevent decubiti and help reduce spasticity. Currently, an active therapy approach is not considered. However, at the Ocean Hyperbaric Neurologic Center, a new method has been devised. Late intensive neurorehabilitation has become standard practice where the clinic deals with high-dose oxygen and the recoverable brain. Long-term major brain insults treated therein consist of ischemic thrombotic (1) or hemorrhagic stroke, severe traumatic brain injury, and anoxic ischemic encephalopathy( 2 ), with all of these cases ranging from semi- ambulatory to apolic coma. (3) Encouraging to dramatic results has been observed in a large number of patients treated.

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Hyperbaric Oxygenation in the Acute Stroke

By R.A. Neubauer, M.D., J. Orient, M.D., & M. Hall-Dickenson B.Sc

Approximately 600,000 cases of stroke occur each year in the United States, i.e., one every fifty-three seconds. Medical bills and lost earnings of Americans who suffer stroke each year total forty-one billion dollars. Irrespective of all attempted therapies including thrombolysis, calcium channel blockers, glutamine antagonist, steroids, lazroids, etc., the basic deficit is that of oxygen reduction or deprivation... Our early data strongly indicated that after four-to-six-hour window to approximately one week, hyperbaric oxygenation was not nearly as dramatic or effective as in the initial stages. Earlier intervention rendered a more pronounced effect on stopping or limiting the ischemic cascade (3) associated with multiple biochemical actions that take place as the body's defense against hypoxia..

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Breaking Comas by Peter Catalano in AT THE EDGE NATURAL SCIENCE October 1995

This article describes the pioneering work of Richard A. Neubauer, MD with hyperbaric oxygen and recoverable brain cells during coma or vegetative state.

In December 1989, Charlie Smith suffered life-threatening injuries in a single-car accident along a busy Ohio interstate...Smith stayed in the intensive care unit for two weeks before being placed in a coma-management program... Despite slight improvement, it became increasingly clear to Smith's doctors that his recovery had plateaued, leaving him indefinitely locked in a semi- vegetative state. He was discharged from the hospital in June 1990-after exhausting $400,000 in medical insurance-seven months after his accident. Smith's case was deemed hopeless... Today, Charlie Smith is contemplating a return to work. He lives independently and takes care of all his own needs. Although his rehabilitative therapy continues, his only real disability is a slight limp requiring occasional use of a cane...read whole article

Cerebral Palsy and the Brain Injured Child

R. A. Neubauer, MD, USA Presented at 26th Annual Meeting of the European Underwater and Baromedical Society on Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine Malta September 14-17, 2000

Cerebral Palsy is a term that encompasses many etiological factors in children diagnosed in utero to age fourteen. Problems may present in utero, peri-natal, and post-natal. Infections, traumatic brain injury, near-drowning, and strokes in children suffering from neurological problems come under the heading of Cerebral Palsy. Hyperbaric oxygenation not only relieves hypoxia but also jumpstarts the brain to much better organization and function. In the very young, it produces a better internal milieu for the growth of new brain tissue. Compelling studies around the world were presented at a conference in Boca Raton, July of 1966. 1 This is well known therapy for the neonates in China, Russia, and South America. In certain of these areas, hypoxic or neurologic involved infants are taken from the delivery room to the hyperbaric chamber. The clinical effects are remarkable. ...read whole article