Disaster Boy dies in explosion of hyperbaric chamber at Troy medical facility - Small boy spontaneously combusts

Boy dies in explosion of hyperbaric chamber at Troy medical facility
Detroit Free Press (archive.ph)
By Andrea May Sahouri and Kristen Jordan Shamus
2025-01-31 22:28:44GMT

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A hyperbaric chamber at the Oxford Center in Brighton, Mich., is shown Feb. 8, 2024. (David Guralnick/Detroit News via AP)

A 5-year-old boy from Royal Oak died Friday during an explosion of a hyperbaric chamber at a Troy medical center, police said.

The explosion happened shortly before 8 a.m. at The Oxford Center at 165 Kirts Blvd. Police said the boy was found dead inside the chamber. His mother, who was injured, was with him at the facility at the time of the explosion, officials said.

The Oxford Center's website says that it provides therapy for children with such health conditions as autism, cancer, ADHD, autoimmune diseases, and multiple others.

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A Troy Police Department officer walks outside the Oxford Center in Troy on Friday, Jan. 31, 2025. David Rodriguez Munoz, Detroit Free Press

Troy Fire Lt. Keith Young said investigators do not yet know what caused the explosion, but concentrated oxygen and the pressure used inside hyperbaric chambers are fuel for fire.

In a statement from The Oxford Center, spokesman Andrew Kistner said the cause of the explosion is unknown and that Friday was an "exceptionally difficult day for all of us.

"As law enforcement officials have shared, at our location in Troy, Michigan, this morning, a fire started inside of a hyperbaric oxygen chamber," Kistner wrote in the emailed statement. "The child being treated in that chamber did not survive and the child’s mother was injured.

"The safety and wellbeing of the children we serve is our highest priority. Nothing like this has happened in our more than 15 years of providing this type of therapy. We do not know why or how this happened and will participate in all of the investigations that now need to take place."

Troy Police Lt. Ben Hancock said the mother was standing beside the chamber when it exploded and suffered injuries to her arms.

He described the explosion as a "very sad incident."

Young said Friday morning that the state oversees hyperbaric medical chambers but that authorities with the Troy police and fire departments still were investigating.

Spokespeople for the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs and for the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services told the Free Press that those agencies don't license, regulate or oversee hyperbaric oxygen chambers or the people who operate them.

For decades, hyperbaric oxygen therapy has been used to relieve the effects of decompression sickness for scuba divers, to help firefighters, miners and others who have carbon monoxide poisoning, to improve the success of skin grafts and to speed up healing of infections, such as diabetic foot ulcers and gangrene, and in treatment of crush injuries, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

Here’s how it works: People enter into either a monoplace chamber, which is built for one person, or a mulitplace chamber, which can fit two or more people.

In a monoplace chamber, a person lies down in a long, plastic tube that resembles an MRI machine. In a multiplace chamber, people breathe through masks or hoods.

Pure oxygen is pumped into a pressurized chamber, mask or hood and people inside breathe in the concentrated oxygen, which enters the bloodstream and tissues to boost healing and recovery from injury and helps the body fight infections.

Johns Hopkins Medicine reports that each session can last from 45 minutes to five hours, depending on the reason for the treatment.

The Oxford Center is among the alternative medical centers or medical spas that, in recent years, have offered hyperbaric oxygen therapy for conditions that are not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, such as autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, sports injuries, COVID-19, depression, alopecia, HIV/AIDS, strokes, migraine headaches, and as an anti-aging treatment.

The Oxford Center, which has locations in Brighton and Troy, has generated controversy. In August, the facility's former director Kimberly Coden pleaded guilty to nine charges after officials with Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel’s Office said she used false credentials to treat children with autism.

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Troy Police Department vehicles are parked outside the Oxford Center in Troy on Friday, Jan. 31, 2025. David Rodriguez Munoz, Detroit Free Press

She falsely presented herself as a board-certified behavioral analyst without being licensed and without the proper education and used an actual analyst’s certification to get jobs within the health sector, officials said. And she’d also used professional business cards, verbal statements, written documents and presented university degrees she allegedly didn’t earn.

Coden also tried to intimidate a witness through text messages to keep them from testifying against her, officials said.

When Coden pleaded guilty, her lawyer said her client was "really, truly remorseful."

Hazards of hyperbaric chambers
A study was published in the medical journal Lancet reviewing hyperbaric chamber fires over more than 70 years, from 1923 to 1996, and found that 77 people died in 35 fires. Before 1980, most of the fires were caused by electrical ignition. But since then, fires have mostly been sparked by something that was carried into the hyperbaric chamber.

Officials in Friday's explosion at The Oxford Center said they don't know whether someone brought something into the chamber before it exploded, but acknowledged the chambers create an environment that is "extremely combustible."

The National Fire Protection Association has written about the distinct hazards associated with hyperbaric facilities, including the increased pressure and presence of elevated oxygen levels.

In an August 2021, blog post from the National Fire Protection Association, Brian O’Connor wrote:

"While oxygen itself is not flammable, it is an oxidizer that supports combustion and can increase the flammability of other materials," including flame-resistant fabrics and materials.

“This means that care must be taken to prevent any means of ignition from entering the oxygen-enriched environment, since the conditions exist for a fire to grow rapidly."

O’Connor wrote that another fire safety problem with hyperbaric chamber facilities is that it’s difficult to evacuate the chamber when fires do occur.

“Since these chambers are pressurized, they must undergo a decompression process before occupants can safely exit. The process is required to take no more than six minutes for (multiplace) chambers and two minutes for (monoplace chambers) when returning from three times standard atmospheric pressure,” he wrote.

These facts, he said, make it vital to ensure that any facility that uses a hyperbaric chamber adhere to strict fire safety regulations, such as allowing only certain fabrics to be worn and restricting other flammable materials to be brought inside the chamber, installing specialty sprinkler systems, and in some cases, independently supplied handlines.

This story was updated to add new information.

Free Press staff writer Darcie Moran contributed to this report.
 
Horribly ugly way to die, but at least the child was just gone instantly. I feel awful for his mother, and I personally think heads should roll if this child was undergoing this treatment for no good reason because holy fuck hyperbaric chambers scare the fuck out of me.

I say this because of a case I remember hearing about back in either the 2000s or the early 2010s when a horse was being treated in a hyperbaric chamber specially made for livestock. The horse was wearing steel shoes, and when one of them scraped against the concrete floor, it caused a spark. That caused a big explosion that killed both the horse and the handler in the chamber with him.
 
Horribly ugly way to die, but at least the child was just gone instantly. I feel awful for his mother, and I personally think heads should roll if this child was undergoing this treatment for no good reason because holy fuck hyperbaric chambers scare the fuck out of me.

I say this because of a case I remember hearing about back in either the 2000s or the early 2010s when a horse was being treated in a hyperbaric chamber specially made for livestock. The horse was wearing steel shoes, and when one of them scraped against the concrete floor, it caused a spark. That caused a big explosion that killed both the horse and the handler in the chamber with him.
Pretty close, but the horse actually started kicking, dislodging a lid and exposing some metal shit which caused the sparks when Tux wouldn’t calm down, killing Erica Marshall 28. This caused a hilarious bout of litigation as the woman’s husband filed a wrongful death suit and the owner filed his own lawsuit against the insurance company who refused to pay out because she wasn’t listed under the policy.

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Pretty close, but the horse actually started kicking, dislodging a lid and exposing some metal shit which caused the sparks when Tux wouldn’t calm down, killing Erica Marshall 28. This caused a hilarious bout of litigation as the woman’s husband filed a wrongful death suit and the owner filed his own lawsuit against the insurance company who refused to pay out because she wasn’t listed under the policy.

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I only ever heard this story through the grapevine of other farriers, so thank you for this info! My autism and horror are once again piqued
 
Shit is wild. I have claustrophobia, so I could not imagine being in something like that.

The girl in the picture with the horse looks like Alicia Witt.
 
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Wonderful, yet another reason for me to fear hospitals: random explosions.
No more a hospital than a medspa is. Just some shady alternative medicine clinic probably operating second hand equipment that is poorly maintained with sulky antisocial staff who are indifferent to safety procedures.
 
Ever seen what happens when a Cheeto is thrown into an almost pure O2 environment? It spontaneously combusts in a white-hot flame, no ignition source required. It's a wonderful illustration of why you don't fuck with the stuff willy-nilly, because all sorts of complex organic things react like that once the concentration gets up there.

The clientele for this crunchy mom clinic sound an awful lot like a bunch of ambulatory Cheetos, and they're using high-concentration O2 to treat basically everything. Surprised this didn't happen sooner, tbh.

Flaming Hot Cheetos
 
Are the benefits of Hyperbaric chambers really worth putting sick children in them without the bends?

Just a cursory search already talks about lung collapses and heart failure, even if we ignore the chance of you getting flash roasted.

A local news station also mentioned the hospital wasn't accredited and the state doesn't require licensing for the facility. Be interested in seeing when the machines were last maintenanced.

Edit:

The video I'm referring to:
https://youtu.be/A1ndDOTI0bc?si=KVfWjhVFMFYGMV9V
No. It’s quackery, I always thought getting a ADHD or autistic kid in a chamber for 20-60 minutes was just a placebo effect, but the benefit came from making them be still and focus on breathing. So basically they are endangering their lives and charging a bunch of money to make a kid meditate, which does have beneficial effects but doesn’t require an oxygen chamber.
 
Wonderful, yet another reason for me to fear hospitals: random explosions.
They're not a hospital, they're a "hyperbaric oxygen" place. They advertise all over Christian radio here in Detroit and claim that if you go into one of those chambers you'll be experiencing the atmosphere as it was before the Noachian flood and that it cures autism.
 
Ever since I read up on the Byford Dolphin incident?

I've had an unnaturally strong aversion to ANY pressure vessel that ANY living thing larger than bacteria is going to be inside of......

This only confirms my growing phobia.
I remember seeing a picture of one victim. Just a pile of meat, barely recognizable as human.
 
Yea I really don't understand how a hyperbaric chamber is supposed to help with stuff like autism or ADHD.
It's another example of what happens when Munchie moms are aware of certain technologies.

"Will it work with my child?"

(Person who only wants to make money): "sure! Let's give it a try".

Also lupus.
It's never lupus.
 
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