Your recovery process deserves as much attention as your surgery.
Written by
Angel Rigueras
Pain Management Specialist
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Written by
Angel Rigueras
Pain Management Specialist
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Surgery seeks to solve a problem in the first instance, but its recovery can be affected by factors like circulation, swelling, infection risk, diabetes, prior radiation therapy, or tissue that is already fragile. Even with excellent surgical technique, some patients face complications such as delayed healing, wound breakdown, or tissue at risk.
HBOT can be a helpful part of surgical recovery when the core issue is that tissue is not getting enough oxygen to heal well. In the chamber, you breathe 100% oxygen under gentle pressure. That process increases the amount of oxygen your blood can carry and deliver to tissue that is stressed or slow to repair. In practical terms, HBOT may support surgical recovery by:
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Non healing wounds are often not just skin deep. They can involve poor circulation, nerve damage, and ongoing inflammation. In diabetes, this risk is common: lifetime risk estimates for a diabetic foot ulcer are often reported in the 19% to 34% range. HBOT is used as an adjunct to strong wound care for selected, more severe wounds because higher oxygen delivery can support tissue repair, help the body fight infection in the wound environment, and support wound closure. Patients usually see the best outcomes when HBOT is paired with a multidisciplinary plan that includes offloading, debridement when needed, glucose control, and evidence based wound care.
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Most grafts and flaps heal without HBOT. Where HBOT becomes relevant is when a graft or flap is compromised, meaning tissue is threatened because of poor perfusion, swelling, or low oxygen levels. In these cases, HBOT may help by increasing oxygen delivery to the at risk tissue and supporting the healing processes that help the flap or graft survive. This can reduce the need for repeat procedures in selected cases.
After radiation therapy, tissue can become scarred, less elastic, and poorly vascularized. Months or even years later, patients may develop wounds that will not heal, pain, recurrent infections, or tissue breakdown in the radiated area. HBOT is one of the most frequently used therapies for delayed radiation injury because it can support new blood vessel formation and improve tissue quality in areas that have been chronically oxygen deprived. In real life, HBOT is often paired with specialty care and, when needed, surgical management.
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Some urology problems fall under delayed radiation injury, such as radiation cystitis, where bladder tissue becomes fragile and can lead to bleeding, urgency, pain, or recurrent symptoms. HBOT may help by improving oxygen delivery and supporting the repair environment in radiation injured tissue. Treatment is individualized and coordinated with urology.
Want to know if HBOT is for you?
In severe injuries where tissue is deprived of blood flow, swelling can create a cycle that further reduces oxygen delivery. In selected cases, HBOT may support recovery by reducing swelling and improving tissue oxygenation, helping interrupt that cycle while definitive surgical care and rehabilitation are being delivered.
In reconstructive and plastic surgery, healing depends on tissue perfusion and a stable recovery environment. HBOT may be considered for patients with higher risk healing situations, including compromised tissue, prior radiation exposure, or wounds that are slow to close. The goal is to support tissue viability and reduce setbacks when healing is not progressing as expected.
Also explore UIC’s Infusion Therapies and PRP for Orthopedics as supportive options that may be coordinated with your recovery plan.
Some patients explore HBOT as a supportive therapy during fertility care. This is case by case and depends on your diagnosis and treatment plan. If HBOT is considered, the focus is on clear goals, realistic expectations, and coordination with our fertility specialist.
A surgical recovery plan that includes HBOT when appropriate can aim to:
Want to know if HBOT is for you?
You may be a good candidate to explore HBOT as part of surgical recovery if:
Want to know if HBOT is for you?
Ready for a clear plan?
Call (866) 961-1744 to schedule a consultation, or contact us to request an evaluation.
We will review your symptoms, timeline, and goals, then explain whether HBOT will be of benefit for your case and what a realistic treatment plan could look like.