Abstract

Introduction In 2016, the European Committee for Hyperbaric Medicine strongly recommended hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) adjunctive to surgery in post-traumatic crush injuries, initiating as rapidly as possible.For the last 30 years, HBOT has been used in crush injury, but in most cases as a last resort, after skin flaps necrosis or wound bed infection, diminishing its potential benefits as a complementary treatment. It is, therefore, essential to understand how HBOT modulates the outcome of crush injury, and when to use it, since this can be a significant and underused therapeutic weapon that may alter the natural course of these patients. Methods Nineteen (n=19) adult patients with upper limb crush injuries underwent adjunctive HBOT, after the initial surgical approach. The measured outcomes included trauma-related acute complications (tissue necrosis and local infection), and late complications (pseudarthrosis and late deep infection). Results Only six (n=6) patients started HBOT in the first 24 hours. Four (n=4) patients presented acute complications; in half of those cases (n=2), HBOT was initiated more than 24 hours post-injury. Late complications were observed in three patients, none of which had initiated HBOT in the first 24 hours post-injury. Conclusions Either lack of awareness or logistic difficulties, preclude initiating timely HBOT, limiting its potential benefits. It is important to alert all practitioners to the right timing to initiate HBOT in order to improve these patients' outcomes.

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