# Clinical efficacy and mechanisms of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in the treatment of rheumatic and immune diseases

**Authors:** Jinying Fang, Wei Li, Chunping Liu, Yonghong Wang, Jie Hu, Qinglu Sun, Hailong Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2025.1706637 · Frontiers in Medicine · 2025-12-18

## TL;DR

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy shows high efficacy and safety in treating rheumatic and autoimmune diseases, including pain relief and healing of skin ulcers.

## Contribution

This paper reviews recent evidence showing HBOT's high efficacy and safety profile in treating rheumatic and autoimmune conditions.

## Key findings

- HBOT showed 87.5%–100% efficacy in treating rheumatic diseases with skin ulcers.
- Pain relief rates of 87.5–100% were observed in fibromyalgia syndrome patients.
- HBOT was effective for sensorineural hearing loss and acute macular neuroretinopathy.

## Abstract

Rheumatic and autoimmune diseases represent one of the major causes of chronic joint and muscle pain, skin ulceration, and mental depression, significantly impairing patients' physical and psychological wellbeing as well as their quality of life. Current evidence suggests that hypoxia may play a role in the pathogenesis and progression of rheumatic and autoimmune diseases and their associated complications. Hypoxia can induce pathological cellular stress, thereby triggering cell death. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) is a well-established, effective, and safe method for significantly increasing dissolved oxygen content in plasma and arterial oxygen partial pressure. Based on a comprehensive review of all relevant literature published in the past decade and indexed in PubMed regarding HBOT for rheumatic and autoimmune diseases, the following findings were observed: HBOT demonstrated an efficacy rate of 87.5%−100% in treating rheumatic and autoimmune diseases complicated by skin ulcers. For patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), the pain relief rate ranged from 87.5 to 100%. Additionally, HBOT exhibited favorable therapeutic effects in cases involving sensorineural hearing loss and acute macular neuroretinopathy secondary to rheumatic and autoimmune diseases. Regarding safety, adverse effects were reported in seven studies, primarily including mild barotrauma, tinnitus, headache, and claustrophobia. All adverse events resolved upon discontinuation of HBOT, and no severe adverse reactions were documented.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** fibromyalgia syndrome (MONDO:0005546), sensorineural hearing loss (MONDO:0010576), acute macular neuroretinopathy (MONDO:0044627)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Rheumatic and autoimmune diseases (MESH:D012216), acute macular neuroretinopathy (MESH:D000080363), FMS (MESH:D005356), depression (MESH:D003866), sensorineural hearing loss (MESH:D006319), pain (MESH:D010146), Hypoxia (MESH:D000860), joint and muscle pain (MESH:D063806), barotrauma (MESH:D001469), tinnitus (MESH:D014012), skin ulceration (MESH:D012883), claustrophobia (MESH:D010698), headache (MESH:D006261)
- **Chemicals:** oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

64 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12756175/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12756175