Hyperbaric oxygen therapy in the treatment of complications of irradiation in head and neck area.

Rubicon Research Repository/Manakin Repository

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy in the treatment of complications of irradiation in head and neck area.

Show simple item record


dc.contributor.author Narozny, W
dc.contributor.author Sicko, Z
dc.contributor.author Kot, J
dc.contributor.author Stankiewicz, C
dc.contributor.author Przewozny, T
dc.contributor.author Kuczkowski, J
dc.date.accessioned 2007-01-24T04:00:44Z
dc.date.available 2007-01-24T04:00:44Z
dc.date.issued 2005
dc.identifier.citation Undersea Hyperb Med. 2005 Mar-Apr;32(2):103-10. en
dc.identifier.other PMID- 15926302
dc.identifier.uri http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/4040
dc.description Undersea & hyperbaric medicine : journal of the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc. en
dc.description.abstract BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We have investigated the treatment results of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO2) to patients with radiation-induced tissue complications. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Eight patients (1.4%) from 548 with head and neck cancers treated surgically with post- or preoperative radiotherapy or radiotherapy alone in standard doses who developed postradiation complications (6 patients with laryngeal chondroradionecrosis, 1 patient with osteoradionecrosis of the temporal bone, and 1 patient with soft tissue radionecrosis) are presented. To evaluate radiation reactions occuring in the head and neck region, we used the Chandler grading system for classification of postradiation larynx injuries and SOMA/LENT score for classification of postradiation injuries of mucosa of upper aerodigestive tract. Grades I and II in those grading systems are expected side effects of radiation therapy, thus our cases were all in grades III and IV. The HBO2 was performed after failure of the conventional treatment (antibiotics, steroids, topical therapy). The number of HBO2 expositions was from 8 to 39 and the delay to therapy from 2 to 22 months. RESULTS: Symptoms resolved in all treated patients. Six patients with laryngeal chondroradionecrosis had no symptoms after therapy and in three of them after partial laryngectomy the decannulation was performed. In one patient with mucosal radionecrosis after total laryngectomy, the esophageal fistula was closed and in one patient with osteoradionecrosis of the temporal bone, wound debridement followed. CONCLUSION: The authors' experience supports the increasing clinical evidence that HBO2 is an effective adjunct therapy for treatment of complications of irradiation in head and neck area. en
dc.format.extent 178800 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en_US en
dc.publisher Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc. en
dc.subject Fistula/therapy en
dc.subject Human en
dc.subject Hyperbaric Oxygenation/*methods en
dc.subject Laryngeal Diseases/therapy en
dc.subject Laryngeal Neoplasms/*radiotherapy en
dc.subject Larynx/*radiation effects en
dc.subject Osteoradionecrosis/therapy en
dc.subject Pharyngeal Diseases/therapy en
dc.subject Radiation Injuries/*therapy en
dc.subject Retrospective Studies en
dc.subject Skull Neoplasms/*radiotherapy en
dc.subject Temporal Bone/radiation effects en
dc.subject Tonsillar Neoplasms/radiotherapy en
dc.title Hyperbaric oxygen therapy in the treatment of complications of irradiation in head and neck area. en
dc.type Article en

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
15926302.pdf 174.6Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Browse

My Account