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Study Undersea Hyperb Med 2021

Hyperbaric oxygen for thermal burns

Cianci P, Sato R, Faulkner J — Undersea Hyperb Med, 2021

Tier 2, Indexed

Automatically imported from PubMed based on relevance criteria.

Summary

What Researchers Did

Researchers reviewed existing animal and human studies to evaluate the efficacy and safety of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for thermal burns.

What They Found

Researchers found a significant and consistently positive body of evidence from animal and human studies supporting hyperbaric oxygen therapy for thermal burns. This therapy was shown to prevent dermal ischaemia, reduce oedema, and prevent partial- to full-thickness conversion. Clinical reports indicated reductions in mortality, length of hospital stay, number of surgeries, and cost of care, with the therapy deemed safe when properly administered.

Canadian Relevance

This study does not have a direct Canadian connection, as it is a general review of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for thermal burns.

Study Limitations

The abstract does not explicitly state study limitations, but as a review, its conclusions are dependent on the quality and scope of the included studies.

This plain-language summary is generated with AI assistance and checked against the source abstract before publication. See our editorial policy.

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Study Details

Study Type Study
Category Wound Care
Source Pubmed
PubMed ID 34847309
Year Published 2021
Journal Undersea Hyperb Med
MeSH Terms Animals; Humans; Burns; Hyperbaric Oxygenation; Length of Stay; Wound Healing

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Disclaimer: This study summary is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. The information presented reflects the findings of the original research authors and may not represent the views of Canada Hyperbarics. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making treatment decisions.

Last reviewed: March 19, 2026 | Reviewed by: Canada Hyperbarics Editorial Team | Editorial process | Research sources | Counts & methodology