Last February, a two-year-old girl fell into an outdoor pool sitting at 41 degrees Fahrenheit. Little Eden drowned for 10 to 15 minutes before she was found. As a result, she suffered cardiac arrest and brain damage.
Doctors are now claiming to have miraculously reversed Eden's brain damage, after starting the toddler on normobaric oxygen and hyperbaric oxygen therapy 55 days after the accident. The case was recently published in the journal Medical Gas Research.
It was Dr. Paul Harch, clinical professor and director of hyperbaric medicine at LSU Health New Orleans, who suggested she try hyperbaric oxygen therapy. The family lived far away from the treatment center, so they began with another form of treatment. They started Eden on a "bridge" treatment to help stop further degeneration of her brain tissues.
The treatment began 55 days after the accident. It involved breathing through the nose in 100% normal normobaric oxygen (oxygen at sea level) for 45 minutes, twice each day. According to the study, "Within hours the patient was more alert, awake, and stopped squirming."
Over the next three weeks, Eden's doctors reported her laughing, speaking in short sentences and increasing the movement of her limbs. 78 days after the accident, Eden's family traveled to New Orleans to begin the full hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Eden would lay in a hyperbaric chamber for 45 minutes a day, five days a week for a total of 40 sessions.
Toward the end of Eden's treatment, she showed miraculous results. She was able to speak more fluently, she displayed normal cognition and near-normal motor function, and she showed an improvement in her neurological abnormalities.
While he is quick to point out that this is just one case, Dr. Harch said, "Such low-risk medical treatment may have a profound effect on recovery of function in similar patients who are neurologically devastated by drowning."
Eden's Story
After Eden was resuscitated, her brain scans showed significant brain damage. The damage involved a deep gray matter injury and cerebral atrophy, with gray and white matter loss. Eden was left in a state of constant head shaking and squirming. The two-year-old was unable to talk or walk, and she was unresponsive to commands.
