RCT 2009
From the library

Hyperbaric treatment for children with autism — multicenter, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial

Rossignol DA, Rossignol LW, Smith S, Schneider C, et al.

BMC Pediatrics n = 62 1.3 ATA 40 sessions
Plain English

This widely-cited multicenter trial enrolled 62 children with autism in a double-blind protocol. The treatment group received 1.3 ATA — the lowest pressure typically used clinically. Even at this gentle pressure with only slightly enriched oxygen, the children in the active group showed improvements in receptive language, eye contact, and social interaction. The study is influential because it established that you do not need 2.0 ATA chambers to get neurological benefit — a finding that drives the modern home-chamber industry, which centers on the well-tolerated 1.3 to 1.5 ATA range.

Key findings

What the trial documented.

  • Improvements in receptive language, social interaction, and eye contact
  • Demonstrated efficacy at low pressure (1.3 ATA) and ambient oxygen
  • Established that mild HBOT can be effective even with reduced oxygen concentration

This widely-cited multicenter trial enrolled 62 children with autism in a double-blind protocol. The treatment group received 1.3 ATA — the lowest pressure typically used clinically. Even at this gentle pressure with only slightly enriched oxygen, the children in the active group showed improvements in receptive language, eye contact, and social interaction. The study is influential because it established that you do not need 2.0 ATA chambers to get neurological benefit — a finding that drives the modern home-chamber industry, which centers on the well-tolerated 1.3 to 1.5 ATA range.

Protocol used

1.3 ATA, 24% oxygen, 60-minute sessions, 5 days/week for 40 sessions

Full citation

Rossignol DA, Rossignol LW, Smith S, Schneider C, et al.. Hyperbaric treatment for children with autism — multicenter, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial. BMC Pediatrics. 2009.