Intermittent Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for Reduction of Mortality in Experimental Polymicrobial Sepsis

Abstract
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy has a marked beneficial effect in experimental intraabdominal sepsis. Two rat models involving implantation of either rat fecal material or a mixture of pure cultures of Escherichia coli, Streptococcus faecalis, and Bacteroides fragilis were used in this study. A death rate of 100% was obtained in control animals implanted with fecal material; with intermittent hyperbaric oxygen treatment, a death rate of only 8% was observed (P < .005). With a mixture of pure cultures of clinical pathogens, the death rate in control animals was 79%, and intermittent hyperbaric oxygen treatment reduced the rate to 23% (P < .005). Data from cultures of blood indicated that the efficacy of hyperbaric oxygen was not related to antibacterial activity.