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Center for Hyperbaric Medicine & Wound Healing

Photo caption: (seated from left to right) Patient Ted Corn and patient Madilyn Makboulian, celebrate with staff from the Center for Hyperbaric Medicine & Wound Healing and Restorix Health. Photo by Kristy Leibowitz

Catholic Health’s St. Catherine of Siena Hospital recently celebrated a 10-year anniversary of offering hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO) at its Center for Hyperbaric Medicine & Wound Healing. The Center, in partnership with RestorixHealth, offers comprehensive care for chronic and complex wounds.

“We are proud to reach this significant milestone of providing innovative wound care services to our community,” Lisa Marie Terrana, MD, the Center’s medical director. “Every day, our multidisciplinary team of specialists utilize evidence-based therapies and leading-edge technologies to help our patients recover from a wide range of serious wounds and return to their normal lives.”

Theodore “Ted” Corn, 78, an Army Veteran, 38-year volunteer with the Deer Park Fire Department and dedicated community member, was enjoying an active lifestyle before discovering blood in his urine. Previously treated for prostate cancer, Mr. Corn was suffering from side-effects of chemotherapy and radiation, forcing him to take a medical leave of absence from his security job. Mr. Corn was then referred to St. Catherine’s Center for Hyperbaric Medicine & Wound Healing for HBO therapy – a treatment in which a patient breathes 100% pure oxygen while inside a pressurized chamber to activate white blood cells and increase the flow of oxygen to organs and tissues to promote wound healing.

Mr. Corn underwent two-hour HBO therapy sessions five days a week, noticing remarkable improvement in just one week. After 30 sessions, he experienced a complete resolution of symptoms.

“HBO therapy allowed us to not only stop Mr. Corn’s bleeding, but also alleviate his pain,” said Anthony Lombardo, the Center’s safety director and hyperbaric oxygen technician. “We’re pleased that our services have helped improve the health and quality of life of Mr. Corn and so many others.”

Mr. Corn expressed his gratitude for the care he received, saying “They really know their business, the therapy has done its job and everybody was very nice to me. If somebody has a wound, this is the best thing for them.” Mr. Corn is looking forward to returning to his job and the community activities he treasures.

HBO therapy treatment can also be beneficial for breast cancer survivors who have scar tissue. Madilyn Makboulian began HBO treatment at St Catherine of Siena Hospital in April 2019 and underwent one month of daily treatments. The treatment significantly helped to heal breast scar tissue. 

Ms. Makboulian said of the care received at St. Catherine’s, “I had a great experience at the Center, as all of the staff were very pleasant and accommodating. They were caring and understanding of the situation I was dealing with.”

For more information about St. Catherine of Siena Hospital’s Center for Hyperbaric Medicine & Wound Healing or to schedule an appointment, call (631) 784-7200.

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About Catholic Health 

Catholic Health is an integrated system encompassing some of the region’s finest health and human services agencies. The health system has over 17,000 employees, six acute care hospitals, three nursing homes, a home health service, hospice and a network of physician practices. Under the sponsorship of the Diocese of Rockville Centre, Catholic Health serves hundreds of thousands of Long Islanders each year, providing care that extends from the beginning of life to helping people live their final years in comfort, grace and dignity.

Sechrist model chamber for hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Photo courtesy Renee Novelle

Port Jefferson’s St. Charles Hospital will open its new Center for Hyperbaric Medicine & Wound Healing on July 18, as the hospital seeks to help people with chronic, nonhealing wounds.

The center, which will be located on the second floor of the hospital, will include two hyperbaric chambers that provide 100% pure oxygen under pressurized conditions and will have four examining rooms.

The chamber “provides patients with the opportunity to properly oxygenate their blood, which will increase wound healing and wound-healing time,” said Jason Foeppel, a registered nurse and program director for this new service.

Potential patients will be eligible for this treatment when they have wounds that fail to heal after other treatments for 30 days or more.

Residents with circulatory challenges or who have diabetes can struggle with a wound that not only doesn’t heal, but can cause other health problems as well.

More oxygen in people’s red blood cells promotes wound healing and prevents infection.

The treatment “goes hand in hand to deliver aid to the body’s immune system and to promote a healing environment,” Foeppel said.

Nicholas Dominici, RestorixHealth regional director of Clinical Operations; Ronald Weingartner, chief operating officer, St. Charles Hospital; Jim O’Connor, president, St. Charles Hospital; and Jason Foeppel, program director. Photo courtesy Renee Novelle

St. Charles is partnering with RestorixHealth in this wound healing effort. A national chain, RestorixHealth has created similar wound healing partnerships with other health care facilities in all 50 states.

The new wound healing center at St. Charles is one of several others on Long Island, amid an increased demand for these kinds of services.

Partnering with Healogics, Huntington Hospital opened a hyperbaric chamber and wound healing center in May 2021. Stony Brook Southampton Hospital also has a wound care center.

“There’s a great need for this in our community,” said John Kutzma, program director at the Huntington Hospital center. “We know that there are 7 million Americans living with chronic wounds,” many of whom did not receive necessary medical attention during the worst of the pandemic, as people avoided doctors and hospitals.

Concerns about contracting COVID-19 not only kept people from receiving necessary treatment, but also may have caused nonhealing wounds to deteriorate for people who contracted the virus.

Although Kutzma hasn’t read any scientific studies, he said that, anecdotally, “We’ve had patients that had COVID whose wounds haven’t healed as quickly as non-COVID patients.”

Patients at the Huntington Hospital center range in age from 15 to 100, Kutzma said. People with diabetes constitute about one-third of the patients.

Treatment plan

For the hyperbaric chamber to have the greatest chance of success, patients typically need daily treatments that last between one and a half to two hours, five days a week for four to six weeks. While the time commitment is significant, Foeppel said it has proven effective in wound healing studies.

“We pitch it as an antibiotic treatment,” he said. “You want to complete that full cycle to ensure the body has enough time to complete the healing process.”

Kutzma said Huntington Hospital reviews the treatment plan with new patients.

In following the extensive treatment protocol to its conclusion, he said, “The alternative is to live with this very painful, chronic wound that may lead to amputation.” Given the potential dire alternative, Huntington Hospital doesn’t “have a problem getting that kind of commitment.”

While the treatment has proven effective for many patients, not everyone is medically eligible for the hyperbaric chamber.

Colin Martin, safety director. Photo courtesy Renee Novelle

Some chemotherapy drugs are contraindicators for hyperbaric oxygen treatments. Those patients may have other options, such as skin grafts, extra antibiotics or additional visits with physicians for debridement, which involves removing dead, damaged or infected tissue.

“We invite patients to come in, go through the checklist and see what their plan of attack” includes, Foeppel said.

The cost of the hyperbaric treatment for eligible conditions is generally covered by most health insurance plans, including Medicaid and Medicare, he said. 

The two hyperbaric chambers at St. Charles can treat eight to 10 patients in a day.

Aside from the cost and eligibility, patients who have this treatment frequently ask what they can do during their treatments. The center has a TV that can play movies or people can listen to music.

“We don’t expect you to sit there like in an MRI,” Foeppel said.

As for complaints, patients sometimes say they have pressure in their ears, the way they would if they ascend or descend in an airplane. The center urges people to hold their nose and blow or to do other things to relieve that pressure.

Foeppel encourages patients to use the restroom before the treatment, which is more effective when people don’t interrupt their time in the chamber.

Prospective patients don’t need a referral and can call the St. Charles center at 631-465-2950 to schedule an appointment.