The History of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy & HBot Chambers Part 2

LIVER CLEANSE | GALL BLADDER FLUSH | VIBRABOARD

CANDIDA CLEANSE TREATMENT | PROSTATE ENLARGEMENT

HYPERBARIC  THERAPY | HYPERBARIC CHAMBER

HISTORY OF HYPERBARIC OXYGEN

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiIzkxemrKI[/youtube]

Oxygen was discovered independently by the Swedish apothecary Karl W. Scheele, in 1772, and by the English amateur chemist Joseph Priestley (1733-1804), in August 1774. In 1783, the French physician Caillens was the first doctor reported to have used oxygen therapy as a remedy. In 1798 the Pneumatic Institution for inhalation gas therapy was founded by Thomas Beddoes (1760-1808), a physician-philosopher, in Bristol, England. He employed Humphrey Davy (1778-1829), a brilliant young scientist as superintendent of the Institute, and the engineer James Watt (1736-1819), to help manufacture the gases.

The institute was an outgrowth of the new knowledge about gases (such as oxygen and nitrous oxide) and their manufacture. However, therapy was based on Beddoes’ generally incorrect assumptions about disease; for example, Beddoes assumed that some diseases would naturally respond to a higher or lower oxygen concentration. As might be expected, the treatments offered no real clinical benefit, and the Institute succumbed in 1802.””

The Role Of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy In Emergency Medicine
Modern use of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in clinical medicine began in 1965 with the work of Churchill-Davidson and Borema.

Bahamas, Nassau
Tuvalu, Funafuti
Toowoomba, Queensland
Palmerston, Northern Territory
Tuvalu, Funafuti
Arlington, Virginia
Philippines, Manila
Athabat, United Arab Emirates, Athabat, UAE
Macedonia, Skopje
Ecuador, Quito

Hyperbaric Oxygen Chambers

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Chamber

Portable Hyperbaric Oxygen Chambers

Cerebral Palsy Therapy Hyperbaric Chambers