Why on earth wouldn’t they, the powers that be, try it on other spinal patients 
if even 1 did feel improvement?     Who knows how many out there could
be helped?!      Is this such a horribly expensive treatment that it is only 
used on a few?    Am I not understanding something?
Janice

From: kevin weilacher 
Sent: Saturday, January 15, 2011 10:46 AM
To: Alton Ryder ; [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [TMIC] hyperbaric chamber treatment of wounds

The rock legend Ronnie Lane used to use a hyperbaric chamber for treatment of 
his MS and had success with it....but yet the MS Society still says that there 
is no benefit to it's use....
reference this great interview that Ronnie did many years 
ago....http://www.the-faces.com/lane/ints/1lane2.htm
By the way, Ronnie passed away in 1997 due to pneumonia.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Alton Ryder <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, January 15, 2011 11:06:30 AM
Subject: Re: [TMIC] hyperbaric chamber treatment of wounds

I took this treatment a couple of years ago for a wound that I had had for two 
decades. The results were astounding; it shrunk from four little toes wide and 
one high to one wide and a half  high. However, instead of continuing until it 
was healed, the wound specialist followed the protocol and stopped after six 
weeks (the reason might have been rooted in Medicare's one-size-fits-all 
coverage. 

Yesterday we discussed restarting the hyperbaric chamber treatment.

The only problem is boredom. You cannot bring flammable paper into a chamber, 
but you can watch a video through the transparent wall.

Alton

On Nov 21, 2010, at 11:19 AM, Jan Hargrove wrote:


  hyperbaric chamber

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