WoundReference improves clinical decisions
 Choose the role that best describes you
The insurance has authorized additional therapies beyond 60 sessions. The podiatrist for the HMO wants him to continue. He received 40 sessions March through June 2022. Then 20 more sessions August.

Concern is safety beyond the 60 sessions, not authorization. Any guidance on standard of practice regarding the topic and how best to counsel the patient regarding risks, i.e. cataract
Sep 29, 2022 by John Lindberg, MD
1 replies
Mike White
MD, UHM, MMM, CWS
John,

My assumption is that this is for a chronic refractory osteomyelitis. In general, you can treat longer than "standard practice" but you need to have really good documentation as to why you are continuing to treat the patient. That is justification. Additionally, to answer the question about risks with respect to cataracts, the Palmquist series (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/6691953) showed that is takes somewhere around 150 HBO treatments before a new cataract that is not pre-existing may form, if your patient has pre-exiting cataracts they may progress more quickly. None of is not in stone, so yes I would certainly discuss the POTENTIAL risks of developing cataracts and hyperbaric myopia.
Sep 29, 2022
* Information provided without clinical evaluation and is not intended as a replacement for in-person consultation with a medical professional. The information provided through Curbside Consult is not a substitute for proper training, experience, and exercising of professional judgment. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the contents, neither the authors nor the Wound Reference, Inc. give any guarantee as to the accuracy of the information contained in them nor accept any liability, with respect to loss, damage, injury or expense arising from any such errors or omissions in the contents of the work.
t
-->