Q: What about treatment after surgery?
A: Using hyperbariatric oxygen therapy to treat inpatients with septic diabetic foot ulcers – Wagner grade 3 or higher – immediately after surgery may reduce length of stay as well as lower the risk of requiring multiple surgical debridements.
Q: What are the best-case scenarios for treatment?
A: A significant portion of what we do is limb preservation. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy often can help save a digit, forefoot, or even an extremity.
But it’s not something that just happens overnight. It’s a long-term process. Underlying complicating osteomyelitis may require up to 40-60 adjunctive hyperbaric oxygen treatments, 5 days a week with weekends off, along with concurrent antibiotics, wound care, and vascular interventions when indicated.
Q: Is insurance ever an issue for this treatment?
A: Typically, not if one follows the indications set by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society.
Medicare lists 15 medical indications that it will cover, and a majority of commercial insurers will cover the same 15 indications and possibly more. But commercial insurers may require prior authorization of medical necessity before preceding with hyperbaric oxygen therapy (Diving Hyperb Med. 2016 Sep;46[3]:133-4).