Hyperbaric Chambers

Hyperberic Chamber

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is delivered in a hyperbaric chamber. It is an essential equipment required to adjust the ambient pressure for hyperbaric oxygen therapy. At normal sea level pressure, breathing 100 percent oxygen will not achieve healing results. Our state-of-the-art hyperbaric chambers allow us to safely and effectively deliver 100 percent oxygen at increased pressures.

What is Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT)?

HBOT is a medical intervention where a patient breathes 100% oxygen while inside a hyperbaric chamber that is pressurized to greater than sea level pressures (an augmented atmospheric pressure). According to the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society (UHMS), this pressure may equal or exceed 1.4 ATA.

The increased pressure increases the amount of oxygen dissolved in the blood via Henry’s law, which states that the amount of dissolved gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas. This in turn increases the oxygen supply to tissues, which accelerates the wash-out of other gases, such as carbon monoxide or nitrogen, via an increased diffusion gradient.

The oxygen diffuses primarily into plasma, since haemoglobin is nearly entirely bound with oxygen at room air. The hyper-oxygenated blood then distributes to all the tissues that receive arterial blood flow. The increased oxygen, as well as the increased pressure, are both essential in treating a variety of emergent and nonemergent conditions.

The key is to use oxygen intermittently at higher ambient pressure. The air we breathe contains nearly 21% oxygen. But in a hyperbaric chamber we can deliver 100% intermittent oxygen in an environment usually two to three times greater than the normal atmospheric pressure. That combination allows for an intermittent increase of the amount of oxygen in the blood, which is an effective stimulus to improve blood flow in areas with poor circulation. That in turn helps with the healing of complicated wounds that do not respond to conventional care, helps the immune system fight infections, and does so much more.

HBOT arises as an extraordinary support in the handling of hypoxia and other hypoxia-related phenomena by increasing blood and tissue levels of oxygen.

Approved indications for HBOT

  • Air or gas embolism
  • Acute thermal burn injury
  • Carbon monoxide poisoning Carbon monoxide poisoning complicated by cyanide poisoning
  • Central retinal artery occlusion
  • Clostridial myositis and myonecrosis (gas gangrene)
  • Compromised grafts and Flaps Crush injury,
  • Compartment Syndrome and other acute traumatic ischemia
  • Decompression sickness
  • Delayed radiation injury (soft tissue and bony necrosis)
  • Enhancement of healing in selected problem wounds
  • Idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss
  • Intracranial abscess
  • Necrotizing soft tissue infections
  • Refractory osteomyelitis
  • Severe anaemia

Airox Hyperbaric Chambers Installations

  • Western India Institute of Neuro Science, Kolhapur
  • J. Hospital, Aurangabad
  • Sahyadri Hospital Latur
  • Rahate Surgical Hospital, Nagpur
BAROX SOLO - Half Acrylic
Specification
Barox SOLO - Full Acrylic
Specification
Barox Omega
Specification

Few Prime Customers

Meenakshi Mission Hospital from 2015

Pushpanjali Super Speciality Hospital, Agra from 2020

Shekhar Saraf Memorial Hospital, Aligarh from 2018