A stroke occurs when a person’s brain is not getting enough blood, which in turn means it is not getting enough oxygen. Strokes are caused by blood clots in blood vessels (ischemic stroke), bleeding of blood vessels into tissue (hemorrhagic stroke), and ruptured blood vessels (subarachnoid hemorrhage or ruptured aneurysm). During a stroke, brain damage can happen very quickly, as the cells begin to die without oxygen. For thousands of years, there was no treatment for the most common type of stroke, a blood clot in an artery, until clot-dissolving drugs were developed in the 1980s. The common belief is that a stroke is only treatable if therapy can be delivered within four to five hours of the stroke. This is simply not true. Stroke patients can respond to HBOT at all phases of the injury: acute, subacute (weeks to months), and chronic (greater than 6 months). The key is resupplying oxygen to the stroked tissue and HBOT does this like no other therapy.
A stroke can be disabling and debilitating. After a person has a stroke, there can be long-term symptoms as a result of lost brain tissue and residual injured brain tissue. Some of these symptoms include pain, difficulty walking or balancing, inability or difficulty speaking, memory loss, mood swings, irritability, and difficulty eating or swallowing. A stroke and its aftermath can be very complicated and hard for any person to endure, especially if they were relatively healthy and active before the stroke.