Effects of hyperbaric oxygen on eye tracking abnormalities in males after mild traumatic brain injury

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Abstract

The effects of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO2) on eye movement abnormalities in 60 military servicemembers with at least one mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) from combat were examined in a single-center, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled, prospective study at the Naval Medicine Operational Training Center. During the 10 wk of the study, each subject was delivered a series of 40, once a day, hyperbaric chamber compressions at a pressure of 2.0 atmospheres absolute (ATA). At each session, subjects breathed one of three preassigned oxygen fractions (10.5%, 75%, or 100%) for 1 h, resulting in an oxygen exposure equivalent to breathing either surface air, 100% oxygen at 1.5 ATA, or 100% oxygen at 2.0 ATA, respectively. Using a standardized, validated, computerized eye tracking protocol, fixation, saccades, and smooth pursuit eye movements were measured just prior to intervention and immediately postintervention. Between-and within-groups testing of pre-and postintervention means revealed no significant differences on eye movement abnormalities and no significant main effect for HBO2 at either 1.5 ATA or 2.0 ATA equivalent compared with the sham-control. This study demonstrated that neither 1.5 nor 2.0 ATA equivalent HBO2 had an effect on postconcussive eye movement abnormalities after mTBI when compared with a sham-control.

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Cifu, D. X., Hoke, K. W., Wetzel, P. A., Wares, J. R., Gitchel, G., & Carne, W. (2014). Effects of hyperbaric oxygen on eye tracking abnormalities in males after mild traumatic brain injury. Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development, 51(7), 1047–1056. https://doi.org/10.1682/JRRD.2014.01.0013

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