Sara’s Garden Partners with Wauseon Schools

Sara’s Garden Partners with Wauseon Schools

Sara’s Garden is pleased to announce its partnership with Wauseon Schools providing gross motor and fine motor intervention services which utilize Conductive Education methodology and techniques to Wauseon students!

Through this partnership, Wauseon students, preschool through high school, who have gross motor and/or fine motor goals on their Individualized Education Program (IEP) or who have motor needs on their 504 Plan, will receive motor intervention services from the Sara’s Garden Conductive Education team within the school setting.

Wauseon Schools is unique in its decision to break away from traditional services and offer something “out-of-the-box” to students with motor development needs. Wauseon Schools documented educational progress as well as developmental and functional gains in eight students who elected to switch from traditional services to Conductive Education during the 2011-12 academic year and have now made the decision to provide this service to all its students in the district who can benefit from it.

Through this partnership, which will begin at the start of the 2012-13 school year, it is our belief that we can provide services that are cost-effective, efficient, and most importantly yield high-quality results.

As part of our desire to have all children with special needs receive the highest quality services that they deserve, Sara’s Garden is open to sharing our experience, and would be happy to help others in their attempts to achieve such a partnership in their local area. For questions on Conductive Education programming, please contact us at 419.335.7272. If you are interested in having these or similar services placed on your child’s IEP and you are outside of the Wauseon school district, please contact your local administrator(s) to make your request known. Administrators are welcome to contact Sara’s Garden and/or Wauseon Schools for more specific information.

Life Can Change in a Flash

Life Can Change in a Flash

Many families gather in the kitchen to spend time together. Rarely do we consider that the kitchen might be the most dangerous room in the house. According to the U.S. Fire Administration cooking equipment, most often a range or stovetop, is the leading cause of reported home fires and home fire injuries in the United States. Aron had made French fries for his family more times than he could count and had never had an issue… until a summer day in August that changed his life.

This time started out like any other… Aron poured some fresh vegetable oil from a brand new bottle into the pan on his glass top stove. As he began to slowly heat the oil he covered the pan. A few minutes later he lifted the lid to check on his oil and noticed that it was beginning to smoke. Not wanting to burn his new oil he began to move the pan across the stove. As he was moving the pan over to the cool side of the stove it flashed out and burst into flames.

Oil erupted from the pan and covered both of his hands. He heard sizzling sounds as his hands began to burn. Aron’s skin began bubbling up and melting off his hands as the oil ate its way all the way down to his tendons. He immediately ran both hands under cold water and called for help.

Aron’s surgeons said that the burns on his hands were quite severe. They commented that the extent of the grafting that needed to be done to repair the damage was extreme and very rare. Aron spent a full two weeks in the hospital burn unit until his hands were even able to be operated on. Following the grafting procedure to repair his hands Aron spent another two weeks in the burn unit recovering from the surgery.

Doctors cautioned Aron that he would probably not regain the full range of motion back in his fingers and that his hands would most likely function like two claws.

After being discharged from the hospital, Aron went home to begin the painful road to recovery. The medications he was given did little to mask the pain that he felt from the damaged nerves in his hands. Only a few days after returning home, Aron was in excruciating pain. His family brought him to Sara’s Garden to see if Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy would aid him in his recovery.

As the family explained what had happened to Aron, he rocked back and forth and looked as if he would pass out. The pain and nerve damage was so severe that Aron’s brain began sending messages all over his body that his feet were in pain as well. It got to the point that he could not walk without shoes on his feet. He even had to go to bed and sleep with his shoes on.

Shortly after that, Aron began HBOT treatments at Sara’s Garden. Each time he received a treatment he commented that his pain level had diminished. After completing only 17 HBOT treatments, Aron is beginning to feel like himself again. The graft sites are growing hair and are demonstrating intact skin integrity. His hands are able to perform near normal opening and closing grasps and all of his open wounds have healed.

Each time Aron would return to the hospital for his routine checkups his therapists were amazed at how fast his burns and grafts were healing. They claimed that his recovery was in the top 1% of the cases they had seen.

As he met and talked to other clients in the burn center’s waiting room, they marveled at his progress compared to that of their own. Patients who had been burned over a year prior to Aron lamented the fact that they had not experienced the level of healing that Aron had received in only one short month. Even more, the other burn patients envied his lack of pain.

Thanks to Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy at Sara’s Garden, Aron has his life back. No matter what you’ve been told, there is hope… for this and many other conditions. HBOT is treatment without drugs… without surgery… without pain.

2012 “Drive Fore Hope” Charity Golf Scramble

2012 “Drive Fore Hope” Charity Golf Scramble

Sara’s Garden would like to invite you to participate its inaugural “Drive Fore Hope” Charity Golf Scramble. We have put together a fun-filled day at Ironwood Golf Course in Wauseon, Ohio and hope to see you there!

Event Date:Friday, September 14, 2012
Event Location:Ironwood Golf Course, Wauseon, Ohio
Event Format:4-Player Team Scramble
Event Cost:$60 per Player
Dinner Only (Opt.):$20 per Person
Registration Deadline:August 15, 2012

If you would like to download a brochure or flyer for this year’s event to print, post and promote click on one of the links below:

  • “Drive Fore Hope” Tri-Fold Brochure – DOWNLOAD
  • “Drive Fore Hope” Promotional Flyer – DOWNLOAD

All proceeds from this event will benefit Sara’s Garden to provide Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy and Conductive Education services. Though we have set a fee of only $110 per hour for HBOT treatments and $25 per hour for CE classes many individuals with disabilities and injuries are not receiving services because the cost is not manageable for their families. Your participation will help to fund Sara’s Garden’s financial aid scholarship program which helps families to be able to afford to receive the healing treatments their loved ones so desperately need. Sara’s Garden is a recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and is the only facility in the United States (and only one of two in North America) to offer both of these services.

Registration Includes:Schedule of Events:
 • Scramble format (4-player teams) 11:00 a.m.• Registration
 • Green and cart fees  • Range Open
 • Range balls  • Silent Auction Opens
 • Lunch & beverage items 12:00 p.m.• Shotgun Scramble
 • Goodie bag 1:30 p.m.• Lunch at the Turn
 • Awards for top teams 5:00 p.m.• Dinner Buffet
 • Dinner buffet  • Awards
 • Silent Auction  • Silent Auction Closes
Sponsorship Opportunities:

Platinum Title Sponsor – $4,800

  • Includes two foursomes, event promotion, platinum title sponsor signage, company promotion table, dinner presentation speech and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 40 hours of HBOT treatments or 192 hours of CE services.

Gold Event Sponsor – $1,200

  • Includes one foursomes, gold event sponsor activity signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 10 hours of HBOT treatments or 48 hours of CE services.

Silver Contest Sponsor – $720

  • Includes silver contest sponsor signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 6 hours of HBOT treatments or 28 hours of CE services.

Bronze Meal Sponsor – $360

  • Includes bronze meal sponsor signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 3 hours of HBOT treatments or 14 hours of CE services.

O2 Tee Sponsor – $110

  • Includes O2 tee sponsor signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 1 hour of HBOT treatments or 4 hours of CE services.

For additional information regarding corporate sponsorship or team registration for the Sara’s Garden “Drive Fore Hope” Charity Golf Scramble please call 419.335.SARA.

Please join us for a great day of golf filled with fun, great food, auction items, skill contests and fabulous prizes. Take a day off work for a great cause and meet some of the amazing people you are golfing to help!

2012 Sara’s Garden Poker Run

2012 Sara’s Garden Poker Run

The 9th Annual Poker Run to benefit Sara’s Garden is right around the corner!

Event Date:Saturday, June 23, 2012
Sign In:10:30 a.m. – Noon.  Ride begins at Noon.
Event Location:The Hope Center at Sara’s Garden
Rider Cost:$20 per Rider
Passenger Cost:$15 per Passenger (Optional)

PLEASE NOTE: One change for this year is that we plan on beginning AND ending the ride at The Hope Center at Sara’s Garden in Wauseon.

Just like last year, we plan on having a photographer out on the course taking action shots of each one of the bikes as they pass by. We hope to provide everyone with a free high resolution action shot of themselves out on the poker run… so slow down and be sure to strike a pose!

If you would like to download a brochure or flyer for this year’s event to print, post and promote click on one of the links below:

  • Poker Run Tri-Fold Brochure – DOWNLOAD
  • Poker Run Promotional Flyer – DOWNLOAD

All proceeds from this event will benefit Sara’s Garden to provide Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy and Conductive Education services. Though we have set a fee of only $110 per hour for HBOT treatments and $25 per hour for CE classes many individuals with disabilities and injuries are not receiving services because the cost is not manageable for their families. Your participation will help to fund Sara’s Garden’s financial aid scholarship program which helps families to be able to afford to receive the healing treatments their loved ones so desperately need. Sara’s Garden is a recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and is the only facility in the United States (and only one of two in North America) to offer both of these services.

Registration Includes:Schedule of Events:
 • Poker Run entry 10:30 a.m.• Registration
 • Coffee & doughnuts  • Detailing Station Opens
 • Water for the road  • Kid Ride-a-Longs
 • High res action photograph 12:00 p.m.• First Bikes Out
 • Lunch buffet  • Photo Shoot
 • Prizes for top hands 3:00 p.m.• Lunch Buffet
 • Silent auction  • Awards
 • $20-rider, $15-passenger (Optional)  • Silent Auction Closes
Sponsorship Opportunities:

Platinum Title Sponsor – $4,800

  • Includes eight rider or passenger entries, event promotion, platinum title sponsor signage, company promotion table, lunch presentation speech and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 40 hours of HBOT treatments or 192 hours of CE services.

Gold Event Sponsor – $1,200

  • Includes four rider or passenger entries, gold event sponsor activity signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 10 hours of HBOT treatments or 48 hours of CE services.

Silver Contest Sponsor – $720

  • Includes silver contest sponsor signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 6 hours of HBOT treatments or 28 hours of CE services.

Bronze Meal Sponsor – $360

  • Includes bronze meal sponsor signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 3 hours of HBOT treatments or 14 hours of CE services.

O2 Tee Sponsor – $110

  • Includes O2 stop sponsor signage and program recognition.
  • This level of sponsorship will provide 1 hour of HBOT treatments or 4 hours of CE services.

For additional information regarding corporate sponsorship or participation in the Sara’s Garden Poker Run please call 419.335.SARA.

Please join us a great day of riding filled with fun, great food, auction items and fabulous prizes. Come spend the day on the open road for a great cause and meet some of the amazing people you are riding to help!

Wauseon Nonprofit Delivers Hyperbaric Treatment

Wauseon Nonprofit Delivers Hyperbaric Treatment

Article published Tuesday, March 20, 2012 by the Toledo Blade

WAUSEON — Northeast Ohio co-workers Laura Ramsey and Pam Haberkorn were trying gluten-free diets to help their autistic children when they learned of an alternative treatment showing promise in research: hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

In the summer of 2009, the teachers took their children to a private hyperbaric oxygen center in North Carolina to get the treatment, involving pure oxygen administered at higher than atmospheric pressure.

While in North Carolina, Katelyn Haberkorn, now 13, received two rounds of so-called dives and made remarkable progress, her mother said. Katelyn showed an interest in books for the first time and began talking more, making eye contact, and paying attention, Ms. Haberkorn said.

“When we learned about this, we had no idea what we were going to see,” said the mother of three from Medina. “She was bringing us books within a week, wanting us to read them.”

The two families since have found Sara’s Garden, a nonprofit center in Wauseon with two hyperbaric chambers, one with five seats and another with 10.

Such chambers have been used for decades, most commonly to heal wounds in diabetics and help divers with decompression sickness, but Sara’s Garden also treats patients with nonemergency ailments not covered by insurance and those who could not afford them elsewhere.

Each session costs $110 to $165 at the center staffed by five nurses and three chamber operators. A round typically involves 40 sessions, said Matthew Rychener, Sara’s Garden’s development director.

Sara’s Garden helps raise funds for treatments, and all patients must have a medical prescription and an X-ray, Mr. Rychener said.

Most hyperbaric clinics in Ohio and Michigan are associated with hospitals, although there are a few other independent facilities.

The Wauseon nonprofit organization got its start after Mr. Rychener’s sister Sara Burkholder died a few hours after her first child was delivered by emergency cesarean section a decade ago. Jackson Burkholder did not have enough oxygen during birth and was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, and his father, Jay, and other relatives researched treatments for him, Mr. Rychener said.

Hyperbaric oxygen treatment was an alternative Jackson’s family found was used in Europe for cerebral palsy, Mr. Rychener said. His nephew, he said, still has sessions at the center opened in 2005 that initially focused on treating children with cerebral palsy.

Cells receive more oxygen than normal during hyperbaric oxygen treatments, and blood vessels and nerves are built, Mr. Rychener said. One of his high school friends, Aron Sauder of Pettisville, did about 20 sessions to ease pain and speed the healing of his hands burned in a cooking fire in August.

“I was very happy with how it works,” said Mr. Sauder, 39, adding the area where skin was taken for grafting has healed.

So was Amanda Jarrett of Huntsville, Ala., a research analyst for a missile defense agency who grew up in Defiance. The 28-year-old was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in July. After hyperbaric oxygen treatments helped alleviate many symptoms, she plans to return to Sara’s Garden periodically in hopes of slowing the autoimmune disease.

Mrs. Jarrett said she went on short-term disability and could not drive before getting hyperbaric oxygen treatments, which are used in the United Kingdom for multiple sclerosis. The numbness in her feet was so bad that the former ballet dancer could not point her toes, which she called heartbreaking, but she was able to resume driving after 20 sessions and now has about 5 percent numbness, she said.

“I felt like a 16-year-old who just got my license,” she recalled of being able to drive again. “Everything just continued to get better and better.”

Mrs. Jarrett, her husband, and another couple plan to start a nonprofit organization to raise money for patients who want hyperbaric oxygen therapy. They also plan to lobby the U.S. Food and Drug Administrative to approve usage for more conditions with the hopes that then more treatments would be covered by more insurance plans. An FDA spokesman did not return calls seeking comment.

Ms. Ramsey of North Ridgeville said her 8-year-old autistic son, Brendan Corrigan, looks forward to treatments because he feels better. So does Ms. Haberkorn’s autistic son, Kevin, 9, his mother said.

Meanwhile, Katelyn, who now has had more than 150 hyperbaric oxygen sessions, is a cheerleader and involved in a ski club, Ms. Haberkorn said. “It has been an amazing life change for our whole family,” she said.

Contact Julie M. McKinnon at: jmckinnon@theblade.com or 419-724-6087.

March 2012 Living Today

March 2012 Living Today

We are so grateful to Mike Nix and his entire staff at Front Porch Publishing for featuring our Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy and Conductive Education services in their March issue of Living Today.

From the writers to the photographers… everyone at Front Porch was so much fun to work with.

To view the entire March 2012 issue of Living Today, click HERE.

If HBOT is so Good, Why Is It Not More Widely Accepted?

If HBOT is so Good, Why Is It Not More Widely Accepted?

Article published by Elmer M. Cranton, M.D.

Doctors are rarely taught about hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) in medical school and therefore most do not know about it. Only about 20 medical schools, less than 15 percent, have actual hyperbaric oxygen facilities, while perhaps another 20 have access to HBOT facilities. If physicians don’t know about a therapy, they obviously won’t prescribe it. If they don’t prescribe HBOT, there is no incentive for more hyperbaric treatment facilities to be established. Therefore, there exist very few hyperbaric chambers, compared with potential need and benefit that could otherwise be achieved—only about 400 chambers in the entire U.S.A. Many of those are dedicated to diving accidents (bends) and are not available for other medical conditions. And, many are located in hospitals that restrict HBOT to a small number of medical conditions reimbursed by Medicare.

Hyperbaric facilities are very expensive to establish and outfit. Because only a few of the many medical conditions that might be helped by HBOT are reimbursed by health care insurance, patients must commonly pay the cost out of their own pockets. Fees for HBOT can range from $150 per hour to almost $1,000 per hour. This denial of insurance reimbursement discourages the creation of new facilities and many patients cannot afford the cost of HBOT when refused medical insurance coverage. It is not uncommon to require 50 to 100 of the hour-long treatments for full benefit.

Advertisements and marketing claims for hyperbaric oxygen therapy is regulated like a drug by the government’s Food and Drug administration (FDA). It costs tens of millions of dollars to conduct medical research that meets FDA standards to allow claims for successful treatment of a specific illness. Medical insurance companies commonly take the position that if the FDA has not issued a formal approval, then the therapy is experimental and they refuse to pay. Because oxygen cannot be patented, profits on sales of oxygen are too small to pay for studies that meet FDA requirements.

Psychological defense mechanisms also come into play. If a doctor is not taught about HBOT in medical school (and most are not), and if a doctor therefore does not routinely use or prescribe HBOT for patients, then one of two things must be true in their minds: 1) either that doctor’s medical education was deficient and he or she is not providing the best of care for patients; or, 2) other doctors routinely using and prescribing HBOT for conditions that are not FDA-approved (off-label) must be “quacks” who exploit desperate patients. Which do you think their choice will be? It’s apparently difficult for many medical doctors to shed an attitude of God-like omniscience and admit that they simply do not know everything there is to know.

The medical profession is becoming polarized concerning HBOT. A large and powerful majority of medical doctors believe that HBOT should be restricted to treatment of those rare conditions with prior FDA approval. That majority now criticizes and even attacks the growing number of physicians who have become familiar with more than 30,000 published scientific papers the subject, and who advocate or use HBOT to treat patients with so-called off-label (non-FDA-approved) conditions. Opponents of such expanded utilization of HBOT should admit that they are remiss in their care of patients, they should open their minds, educate themselves further, and change their ways.

The medical community eagerly accepts scientific research buttressing a therapy it already approves. Somewhat more reluctantly, it examines and debates entirely novel approaches. But what it really hates is reappraising a treatment once rejected—getting the egg off their collective faces. Medicine, after all, is made up of people—people trailing MDs after their names—who, like the rest of us, do not enjoy admitting error.

Someday when HBOT therapy is an established part of standard medical care, historians of twentieth century medicine will wonder how so much supportive research on its benefits could have been published by skillful medical researchers and even more scrupulously ignored by the guardians of our health. By that time, most of the individuals who attempted to keep HBOT on the fringe will probably not be alive to blush, sparing them extensive embarrassment.

The amount of positive research is certainly formidable. And some studies that purport to demonstrate that HBOT doesn’t work actually show the opposite. For example, a recent Canadian study of cerebral palsy showed significant benefit. Under political pressure from parents, the study was reluctantly designed and conducted by Canadian physicians who were inexperienced in the use of HBOT. Both the treatment and placebo groups were pressurized and both groups benefited. The published conclusion in that study mistakenly stated that HBOT did nothing. It’s easy for opponents to design flawed studies and interpret the results to support their biased positions.

In a sense, we’re attempting to set the record straight and to tell people—especially physicians—to become familiar with the published scientific evidence . Mainstream medical journals engage in unconscionable editorial censorship. They refuse to publish positive research studies on alternative therapies, and are quick to print editorial criticism and anecdotal letters to the editor that are biased against such treatments. They have also been quick to uncritically print flawed studies that erroneously allege to disprove a controversial therapy.

Elmer M. Cranton, M.D. retired in 2007 after 40 years of busy medical practice. For many years he was associated in practice with his son, John A. Cranton, ARNP. Dr. Cranton and his son, John, stressed evidence based medical therapies to enhance each patients’ inherent ability to heal, including primary care, family medicine, internal medicine, preventive medicine, nutrition, and healthy life-style. Additional specialties included EDTA chelation therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT), clinical nutrition, geriatrics, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, preventive medicine, and cardiovascular disease.

‘Never’ Should be a 4 Letter Word

‘Never’ Should be a 4 Letter Word

Joshua was born at only 26 weeks. Doctors were unable to determine any cause for the premature delivery. Shortly after his birth, he experienced a Grade 4 intraventricular hemorrhage. This prolonged internal bleeding resulted in severe trauma and damage to his brain. According to the doctors, Joshua would never survive.

In what would mark the first in a long list of overcoming ‘nevers’ placed on him by others, Joshua lived. Due to issues with his biological parents’ home life, Joshua became a ward of the state, placing further uncertainty on his long term survival. Following Joshua’s successful fight to recover from his traumatic birth, the foster care system was told that he would be a vegetable for the rest of his life. They needed to understand that there were no positive expectations for Joshua’s life. Any prospective foster parents would need to realize the severity of his condition and come to terms with what his life most certainly would and would not be.

Joshua was given a list of ‘nevers’… things he could not, and would not ever accomplish. He would never walk. He would never talk. He would never eat on his own. He would never be able to take care of himself. He would need drugs to control his condition for the rest of his life. He would spend the rest of his life in a wheelchair. As he grew, no one would be able to take care of him on their own. He should be put in a home that would be equipped to meet his countless needs.

What a sad, limiting prediction for life. Thankfully, Joshua’s story doesn’t end with the ‘nevers’.

Joshua’s condition has since been diagnosed as Hemiplegia, a severe form of Cerebral Palsy. The damage to his brain caused him to have weakness and decreased control of the right side of his body as well as obvious developmental, physical and speech delays. Joshua has been in occupational, physical and speech therapy for most of his young life. At the age of 3, Joshua was adopted. By this time he was able to speak. While he had a limited vocabulary, he was able to accomplish one more thing that he had been told he would never do.

Just prior to his 4th birthday, Joshua began taking Conductive Education classes at Sara’s Garden. He was still unable to walk without the assistance of another person, wheelchair, or walker. After spending six months in the CE program at Sara’s Garden, Joshua was walking and playing with his brothers and friends. Through much hard work he has been able to overcome more and more of the hurdles that were originally said to be impossible!

At 4½ years of age, Joshua began having seizures. According to the doctors, his test results showed that the seizures were coming from the area of his brain that had been most damaged at birth. After spending 3 long days in the hospital, his family was told that there was nothing more that could be done for Josh except to medicate him. Not wanting to accept this fate, Joshua began receiving Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy treatments at Sara’s Garden.

His family noticed changes taking place in Joshua immediately. This shy, quiet little boy was emerging out of his shell. After completing a round of 40 HBOT treatments Joshua is seizure free. Additionally, his focus and awareness has improved, his vocabulary has expanded and the use of the right side of his body has increased.

Thanks to Conductive Education and Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy at Sara’s Garden, Joshua has a much brighter future. The list of ‘nevers’ that he was given is gone. He has successfully checked off each and every limitation that was placed on him at birth.

No matter what you’ve been told, there is hope… and Sara’s Garden can help you find it.

We Put Athletes Back in Action

We Put Athletes Back in Action

Unfortunately, injuries are a common occurrence in sports. Sports injuries can be broadly classified as either traumatic or overuse injuries. These injuries range from bruises and muscle strains, to fractures and head injuries. Sara’s Garden has had great success in treating injured athletes.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy is the ultimate natural therapy. It increases the amount of oxygen delivered to cells in order to stimulate the body’s natural healing processes, increase athletic stamina and endurance, speed up injury and surgery recovery and strengthen the immune system.

Below are just a few of the sports injury success stories that we’ve had here at Sara’s Garden:

  • 16 Year Old Male – Torn ACL A football player tore his ACL mid season. After undergoing surgery he was told that he would be out six months, effectively ending both his football and basketball seasons. After only 18 HBOT treatments, he was back to running and working out and did not have to miss the basketball season.
  • 17 Year Old Male – Stress Fracture A football player suffered a stress fracture to his foot in a preseason scrimmage. He was told that he would be out six weeks, almost his entire senior year. One week later, after only 6 HBOT treatments, he was back in action and did not miss a single game.
  • 14 Year Old Female – Hairline Fracture and Dislocation A soccer player fractured her clavicle and suffered a sternal dislocation during an intramural basketball game. She was told that she would be out one month and would miss the end of her soccer season. After only 1 week and 7 HBOT treatments she was cleared by her doctor and allowed to finish out her soccer season.
  • 17 Year Old Female – Stress Fracture A multisport athlete suffered a stress fracture to her shin during an off-season basketball camp. After sitting out while using crutches and a walking boot for over 7 weeks, she was released and began training for cross country. However, every time she ran she experienced pain and significant swelling in her leg. After only 6 HBOT treatments the pain and swelling disappeared and she was able to resume competing. She continued to undergo HBOT treatments periodically for the remainder of the season to recover from races quicker and boost her endurance.
  • 18 Year Old Male – Hip Flexor Injury A multisport athlete injured his hip flexor during baseball season at the end of his junior year. The injury did not improve and carried over into preseason workouts for his senior year of football. By the time of his first game he was barely able to run and did not know if he would be able to compete. After beginning HBOT treatments immediately following his first game he was able to continue playing and did not have to miss a single game while recovering from his injury. He went from not being able to run to being the first person down the field on kickoff coverage breaking the opponent’s wedge.
  • 18 Year Old Male – Dislocation A football player dislocated his shoulder near the end of his junior year causing him to miss the final 4 weeks of the season. He underwent surgery after the season was over to repair the damaged shoulder. The injury reappeared in warmups just prior to the first game of his senior year and caused him to have to miss the game. He began HBOT treatments following the first game and was able to continue playing the entire season without missing any additional games.
  • 17 Year Old Female – Severe Ankle Sprain A volleyball player suffered a severe sprain to both sides of her ankle after landing awkwardly following a block. She experienced tremendous swelling and bruising and was forced to use crutches as she was not able to put any weight on her foot. She was told that she would miss the remainder of the regular season as well as any tournament action. After only 4 HBOT treatments her swelling was reduced and she was able to begin putting weight back on her ankle. After a total of 10 treatments she was able to return to action and compete in her team’s post season tournament.

No matter what you’ve been told, there is hope… for this and many other conditions. HBOT is treatment without drugs… without surgery… without pain.

What Happens When You’re Told There’s No Cure?

What Happens When You’re Told There’s No Cure?

When you’re 27 years old you feel like you have the rest of your life ahead of you. You never expect to hear that you have a life threatening condition. In July 2011, Amanda’s world was turned upside down when she discovered that the odd symptoms she had been experiencing for almost a year were the onset of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), a debilitating disease for which there is no known cure.

Multiple Sclerosis affects the ability of nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord to communicate with each other effectively. The body’s immune system attacks and damages its own nerves. When the nerves are damaged they can no longer effectively conduct signals. Almost any neurological symptom can appear with the disease, and often progresses to physical and cognitive disability. After experiencing a buzzing sensation in her tailbone for several months, Amanda woke up one morning numb from the middle of her waist down.

The next five months were tenuous and Amanda’s symptoms continued to progress. When she rubbed her feet together it felt as if there were spikes stabbing at her. Her back would go numb after taking a shower as the nerves became confused and sent improper signals to her brain. The numbness in her body made it difficult to sit at work all day. She would need to come home and lay on the couch on her stomach all night in order to remain comfortable. She began experiencing a sensation called binding, where her waist legs, feet and toes felt as if they had ropes and wires wrapped around them, constricting tighter and tighter.

By the time Amanda was finally diagnosed with MS, walking was difficult and she was no longer able to drive a car as she could not feel her feet on the pedals. She began the standard treatment for MS by receiving steroids in hopes of reducing her symptoms. The steroids made her feel weird and caused her mind to race. Unfortunately, after a long week in the hospital, her symptoms had not improved as well as had been hoped and she went home feeling worse than before treatments began. Amanda’s energy level began to drop and extreme fatigue became difficult to overcome. She could no longer work and had to go on short term disability.

Thankfully Amanda’s story doesn’t end there. She began researching additional treatment options and discovered Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT). Over the past two decades, international medical research has demonstrated that HBOT can play an extremely effective role in the treatment of Multiple Sclerosis. In many European countries, HBOT is now considered an integral part of the MS treatment program. In Britain alone, over 10,000 MS patients have received HBOT from the more-than 60 centers dedicated to treating Multiple Sclerosis.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy should begin as soon as practical and preferably before irreversible lesions have become established. This does not mean that patients with long-term MS will not benefit; but it does mean that time is a factor. In a recent publication in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine researchers demonstrated significant objective improvements in 70% of patients treated.

After completing a round of 40 HBOT treatments Amanda is beginning to feel like herself again. Feeling is returning to her legs and feet. She is walking independently and has started driving again. Her energy has increased dramatically and her family is amazed at the changes they have seen take place in her. She has returned to work and is ready to resume her normal life.

Thanks to Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy at Sara’s Garden, Amanda has her life back. No matter what you’ve been told, there is hope… for this and many other conditions. HBOT is treatment without drugs… without surgery… without pain.