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Dr. Paul G. Harch is the first President of the International
Hyperbaric Medical Association (established in
2001) and President of the International Hyperbaric
Medical Association Foundation. He has lectured
and presented his work at numerous scientific
meetings throughout the U.S. and overseas. In
April, 2004 Dr. Harch was nominated and became
a semi-finalist for the National Institutes of
Health (NIH) Director's Pioneer Award.
Dr. Harch currently divides his time between
his practice in the New Orleans area and his satellite
Chicago facility where he continues to explore
the effect of HBOT on neurological disorders,
animal and human research, teaching and medical
society projects. (The New Orleans facility is
a contract site for Charity Hospital of New Orleans,
the primary teaching institution of Louisiana
State University (LSU) and Tulane University Schools
of Medicine, and the VA Hospital of New Orleans).
Dr. Harch is also a Clinical Assistant Professor
and Director of the LSU School of Medicine's Hyperbaric
Medicine Fellowship Program and Director of the
soon to be opened Hyperbaric Medicine Unit at
Medical Center of Louisiana in New Orleans.
Dr. Paul Harch is a board certified hyperbaric
and emergency medicine physician who has become
one of the foremost authorities in the United
States on the use of hyperbaric oxygen therapy
and SPECT brain blood flow imaging in neurology.
Dr. Harch is a magna cum laude, phi beta kappa
graduate of the University of California, Irvine
in 1976 and Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine in 1980 who has trained in general surgery
and radiology. His hyperbaric career began in
1985. He received initial diving accident management
training through the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration and then prolonged
instruction and experience under the direction
of and in association with one of the world's
most noted diving medicine experts, Dr. Keith
Van Meter. With the aid of a steady supply of
injured divers from the Gulf of Mexico Dr. Harch
began an in-depth study of brain decompression
illness (DCI) in the late 1980's. As he evaluated
divers with brain DCI presenting for primary treatment
weeks to months after their accident or with residual
brain injury following neurological plateau on
the standard U.S. Navy recompression protocol,
it became obvious he was treating ischemic (low blood flow) brain injury and not residual gas.
This was unequivocally confirmed in 1990 and 1991
with two diving cases, a 43 year old demented
commercial diver 7 months after injury and 5 months
after U.S. Navy treatment plateau, and a 33 year
old demented junior high school math teacher,
misdiagnosed and committed to a psychiatric hospital
after a diving accident and then aborted suicide
attempt. Following a call to Dr. Neubauer in April,
1990, Dr. Harch began treating the first diver
and eventually achieved clinical, psychometric,
and SPECT brain blood flow improvement. The second
diver experienced normalization of his EEG, complete
recovery of neurological function and a 22 point
recoup of his pre-accident IQ before the end of
his treatment protocol. He returned to work and
obtained a masters' degree in educational psychology.
Today, he is actively employed by the State of
New Mexico, testing educationally handicapped
children. Dr. Harch reported these cases and subsequent
others at scientific meetings (1,
2).
Simultaneously, Drs. Van Meter and Sheldon Gottlieb,
a colleague of Dr. Neubauer and director of research
at the Baromedical Research Institute of New Orleans,
were conducting a trial of hyperbaric oxygen therapy
in brain injured boxers with a small grant from
the Hirsch Foundation. Encouraging preliminary
results from this study and results from the divers
and the small series of chronic traumatic brain
injured and stroke patients spawned the Perfusion/Metabolism
Encephalopathy Study of Drs. Harch, Gottlieb,
Van Meter, and Staab under the auspices of the
JoEllen Smith Medical Center Institutional Review
Board. This study commenced in 1993, terminated
in 1999, and allowed the evaluation and treatment
with hyperbaric oxygen therapy and SPECT brain
imaging of a large number of patients with a variety
of chronic neurological diseases, including decompression
sickness, stroke, traumatic brain injury, carbon
monoxide poisoning, cerebral palsy, near-drowning,
toxic brain injury, cardiac arrest, static encephalopathy
of childhood, autism, and others. The patients
were evaluated with SPECT imaging before and after
one and then a series of low-pressure hyperbaric
oxygen treatments. In this group was the first
reported North American case of cerebral palsy
successfully treated with hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
The case was reported in 1994 (3) and then the videos of this case and a second
child treated in 1993-4 were combined with a 3rd
case of Dr. Neubauer and presented at the International
Conference on HBOT in Buenos Aires, Argentina
in April, 1996. To date Dr. Harch has treated
a very large number of children with cerebral
palsy or static encephalopathy of various causes.
Some of these videos and the accompanying SPECT
brain scans were shown at the First International
Symposium on Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy and the
Brain Injured Child in Boca Raton, Florida, July
23-4, 1999.
Dr. Harch has imaging and treatment data on
a large number of patients, the publication of
which awaits funding, hopefully through the solicitations
of this website. As a result of Dr. Neubauer's
22 year and Dr. Harch's 10 year experience in
HBOT with acute and chronic stroke, a national
pilot trial of HBOT for Acute Stroke (HOTFAST)
is under development with Drs. James F. Toole
and Paul Harch as the co-principal investigators
and Dr. Neubauer as senior honorary consultant
In this trial, the three physicians will evaluate
the feasibility and efficacy of HBOT in the first
6 hours of stroke. The physicians will attempt
to duplicate the published results of Dr. Neubauer
and others using a rigorous experimental design.
More details will follow below.
Dr. Harch is currently clinical assistant professor
in the Department of Medicine, Section of Emergency
Medicine at Louisiana State University School
of Medicine, New Orleans, Co-Medical Director
of the Hyperbaric Medicine Department at St. Charles
General Hospital, New Orleans, Clinical and Research
Director of the LSU Hyperbaric Medicine Fellowship,
and former Director of the JoEllen Smith Hyperbaric
Medicine Unit of New Orleans. He is the principal
investigator on 2 other LSU IRB-approved studies
that are nearing completion, the Rat Open Head
Bonk Trial of HBOT in the Treatment of Chronic
Traumatic Brain Injury and the Nitrogen Tetroxide/SPECT
brain imaging study of heavily exposed individuals
in Bogalusa, Louisiana. He stays active in emergency
medicine while maintaining a large full-time clinical
hyperbaric medicine practice that has become one
of the largest past and present experiences of
neurological applications of HBOT (see below).
The Harch Hyperbaric Research Foundation (HHRF)
is a tax-exempt donor advisor fund of the not-for-profit
(501c3) Greater New Orleans Foundation. The HHRF
was established to generate and accept tax-exempt
monetary and equipment donations to perform primarily
neurological hyperbaric research. Current top
priority projects include HBOT in cerebral palsy,
autism, trauma, carbon monoxide, and stroke. A
list of these and other projects is listed at
the end of this website. The HHRF is supervised
and administered solely by Dr. Harch.
1. Harch PG, et al. SPECT
brain imaging in the diagnosis and treatment of
type II decompression sickness. Undersea and Hyperbaric
Medicine, 1992;19(Suppl):42.
2. Harch PG, et al. The effect of HBOT tailing
treatment on neurological residual and SPECT brain
images in type II (cerebral) DCI/CAGE. Undersea
and Hyperbaric Medicine, 1994;21(Suppl):22-23.
3. Harch PG, et al. HMPAO SPECT
brain imaging and low pressure HBOT in the diagnosis
and treatment of chronic traumatic, ischemic,
hypoxic and anoxic encephalopathies. Undersea
and Hyperbaric Medicine, 1994;21(Suppl):30.