Yes
Prompt recompression treatment in a hyperbaric (high-pressure) chamber is necessary to deflate the gas bubbles in the bloodstream, dissolve the gases into the blood, and restore adequate oxygenated blood flow to the brain and.
It is used for gas embolism and decompression sickness, treatment of severe smoke inhalation, carbon monoxide poisoning, gas gangrene, radiation tissue damage, thermal burns, extreme blood loss, crush injuries, and wounds that won't heal
Yes, recompression treatment can help in treating gas gangrene. It involves placing the patient in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber to deliver high levels of oxygen to infected tissues, which can inhibit the growth of the bacteria causing gas gangrene and promote healing. However, surgical intervention along with antibiotics is often necessary for complete treatment.
Gas embolism
Air embolism
The primary sign of gas embolism is immediate loss of consciousness; it may or may not be accompanied by convulsions.
Gas embolism is a condition where gas bubbles enter the circulation and can obstruct blood flow, leading to tissue damage and potentially life-threatening complications. It can occur due to decompression sickness, medical procedures involving the introduction of gas into the body, or trauma. Symptoms may include chest pain, shortness of breath, and neurological deficits. Treatment involves stabilizing the patient, removing the gas bubbles, and providing supportive care.
Problems with the pancreas can cause gas, but if you actually have gas in your pancreas, that's abnormal. The treatment depends on what's causing the problem, which could be a variety of things.
The Iron lung was essentially a pressure chamber in which the the pressure could be increased quite a lot over atmospheric pressure as a means of forcing the absorbed coal gas back out. Its other common use was in treating polio, and also divers with the 'bends'. +++ Coal-gas is poisonous by being chiefly Carbon Monoxide, which is fast acting as it binds much more readily than the intended oxygen to the blood's haemoglobin. --- Also, the "iron lung" formerly used to treat polio, is a very different device from the hyperbaric or recompression chamber used to treat the "bends". The iron-lung is a an artificial respirator, the recompression chamber is not. Instead, it is a vessel large enough to accommodate the casualty, and filled with air at the pressure of the dive, then released very slowly.
Any unconscious diver should be assumed to be the victim of gas embolism, regardless of whether consciousness was lost during or promptly after ascent. A doctor may also find pockets of air in the chest around the lungs and sometimes.
You get the air embolism, when there is air in the vascular system. It may be accidental during intravenous fluid administration. You get the air embolism, when you come out of the deep sea very rapidly.
Helium is the noble gas used for cancer treatment. It is used in a technique called Helium Ion Therapy, where helium ions are used to precisely target and treat cancer cells without damaging surrounding healthy tissues.