HBOT Lincoln NE: Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy — What It Is, What the Research Shows | Lost in Float
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Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy · Wellness Guide

HBOT in Lincoln NE: Everything You Need to Know

What hyperbaric oxygen therapy actually is, what the research shows at wellness pressure levels, what to expect in a session, and how it fits your recovery routine — in a reclining chair, not a pod.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy at Lost in Float Lincoln NE — seated chamber, comfortable, 60-minute sessions
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy at Lost in Float — seated reclining chair, TV available · 8244 Northern Lights Dr, Lincoln NE

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy has a reputation for being intimidating — claustrophobic pods, hospital settings, high-pressure chambers reserved for wound care or decompression sickness. The experience at Lost in Float is none of those things.

You sit in a comfortable reclining chair in an air-conditioned chamber — not hot, not claustrophobic. Watch TV, rest, or fall asleep. Breathe oxygen through a mask and let the pressurized environment do its work. Sixty minutes later, you're done. The setup is specifically designed around comfort — because a relaxed body is more receptive to the benefits of increased oxygenation than a tense one.

Before we get into what it's like here, it's worth understanding what HBOT actually is, what the research says at wellness pressure levels, and what you can honestly expect.

A note before we start: HBOT research spans a wide range of pressures and clinical protocols. Much of the strongest published evidence refers to higher-pressure medical HBOT used in hospital settings for specific diagnosed conditions. At Lost in Float, we offer a wellness-focused HBOT experience — for general wellness, recovery, and self-optimization. We are a wellness center, not a medical provider. If you have any health conditions or are taking medications, you will need to get clearance from your healthcare provider before starting.

What Is HBOT?

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy involves breathing oxygen inside a gently pressurized chamber. The increased atmospheric pressure allows your lungs to absorb more oxygen than would be possible at normal air pressure. That oxygen-enriched blood then travels throughout the body — reaching tissues, joints, and organs more effectively than at baseline.

Normal atmospheric pressure at sea level is 1 ATA (atmosphere absolute). HBOT operates above that. At Lost in Float, we offer wellness HBOT from 1.3 to 2.0 ATA using 95–97% concentrated oxygen — everyone starts at 1.3 ATA and progresses based on their individual response. Clinical medical HBOT typically operates at 2.0 ATA and above with 100% physician-prescribed medical-grade oxygen. For a detailed breakdown of what these pressure levels mean and how they differ, read our guide to HBOT pressure levels →

Mild / Wellness HBOT Clinical Medical HBOT
Pressure 1.3–2.0 ATA (Lost in Float range) 2.0+ ATA with 100% medical-grade oxygen
Setting Wellness centers, recovery facilities Hospitals, accredited medical hyperbaric units
Oxygen delivery 95–97% concentrated oxygen via mask 100% physician-prescribed medical-grade oxygen
Typical use Recovery, wellness, performance, brain & cognitive function, anti-aging & longevity Wound healing, decompression sickness, CO poisoning — approved clinical indications
Side effect risk Low — ear equalization most common; well-tolerated by most healthy adults Higher — oxygen toxicity risk increases above 2.0 ATA with 100% oxygen
Prescription required No Yes — physician prescription and oversight required
Why lower pressure still works — and why starting low matters

A common question: if higher pressure delivers more oxygen, isn't it always better? Not necessarily. Research at mild wellness pressures has documented meaningful anti-inflammatory effects, support for cellular energy production, and mitochondrial support — genuine wellness benefits that don't require clinical pressure levels to achieve. Dr. Jason Sonners' comparative research found that 1.3 ATA and 2.0 ATA each affect different sets of cytokine pathways, meaning they're complementary rather than simply one being a stronger dose of the other. Read the full pressure comparison →

Everyone at Lost in Float starts at 1.3 ATA. It takes time for the body to adapt to pressurization — and that adaptation process is itself part of what makes HBOT effective. 2.0 ATA becomes available as your body adjusts and based on your individual response and goals.

How It Works — The Mechanisms

The core mechanism is straightforward: under increased atmospheric pressure, more oxygen dissolves directly into blood plasma — not just into red blood cells. This is governed by Henry's Law of Gases. The result is that oxygen reaches tissues through a different route than normal, potentially accessing areas where blood flow or red blood cell delivery is limited.

Beyond simple oxygenation, research has explored several additional mechanisms at various pressure levels:

  • Enhanced tissue oxygenation: Plasma-dissolved oxygen can reach hypoxic (low-oxygen) tissue that red blood cells may struggle to access — particularly in areas of inflammation, injury, or reduced circulation.
  • Inflammation modulation: Research at 1.3 ATA has documented reductions in pro-inflammatory cytokines including interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) — markers associated with chronic inflammation, fatigue, and impaired recovery.
  • Mitochondrial function: Increased oxygen availability supports ATP production — the energy currency of cells. This is particularly relevant for cognitive function and muscle recovery, both of which are highly oxygen-dependent.
  • Immune modulation: Some mild HBOT research has documented effects on natural killer (NK) cell activity and broader immune function, suggesting a role in immune system support.
  • Stem cell mobilization: Research documents stem cell mobilization at both mild and higher wellness pressures — approximately 3× at 1.3 ATA and approximately 8× at 2.0 ATA per Sonners’ comparative research. Both levels support tissue repair and recovery, with the degree of mobilization scaling with pressure.

What the Research Shows at Wellness Pressure Levels

It's important to be honest about where the evidence is strong and where it's still developing — particularly at the lower pressure range used in wellness settings.

What the research supports at mild pressures

Studies at wellness pressures (approximately 1.3–1.5 ATA) show consistent findings in several areas. Research has documented improved recovery from physical exertion, reduced perceived fatigue, and lower circulating inflammatory markers in people receiving regular mild HBOT sessions. A study involving rugby players found those using mild hyperbaric chambers post-exercise showed faster reductions in creatine kinase levels (a measure of muscle damage) and lower soreness scores compared to controls.

Cognitive and brain health — emerging evidence

Systematic reviews of HBOT and cognitive function — including a comprehensive 2022 review in Neuropsychology Review — document improvements in memory, executive function, information processing speed, and global cognitive scores across multiple studies, primarily at 1.5–2.0 ATA with 100% oxygen. At wellness pressure levels with oxygen delivered via mask, the oxygenation delivered is lower than these clinical protocols — but the directional findings are consistent.

Emerging research has also explored HBOT's role in supporting recovery from post-viral fatigue — including brain fog, persistent low energy, and reduced exercise tolerance. This area is newer and actively developing. Results vary by individual and consistency of use.

Where to set realistic expectations

The research on wellness HBOT is actively growing — and some of the most compelling recent findings come from Dr. Jason Sonners' direct comparison of 1.3 and 2.0 ATA in healthy individuals, and the landmark Israeli telomere research at 2.0 ATA. That said, much of the strongest published evidence still comes from higher-pressure clinical settings with 100% oxygen — and results vary meaningfully by individual, pressure level, session frequency, and what outcomes are being measured. HBOT is a wellness tool that works best as part of a consistent broader routine. It is not a cure and not a substitute for medical care. Read our full breakdown of the research by pressure level →

What to Expect at Lost in Float

Most people's mental image of HBOT involves lying flat inside a narrow tube. Our setup is genuinely different — and that difference matters for both comfort and effectiveness.

01
Before your session
Prep & what to bring
Before you arrive: Review any medications or health concerns with your physician prior to coming in — you will need clearance if you have any medical conditions or are on medications. Complete your waiver ahead of time if available. Shower before your session — clean skin and hair helps keep the chamber environment clean for everyone.

Day of: Hydrate well, but use the restroom before entering the chamber. Eat a light meal beforehand — avoid anything heavy, and skip alcohol and limit caffeine. Arrive 15 minutes early for your first visit.

What to wear: Comfortable, loose cotton or natural fiber clothing — no heavy lotions, hairspray, or strongly scented products. Organic makeup is fine. Leave shoes outside the chamber. Jewelry is fine to wear.
02
Entering the chamber
Seated, comfortable, air-conditioned
You settle into a reclining chair inside a roomy hard-shell chamber — not a pod, not a narrow tube, and not hot. You'll put on your oxygen mask and get comfortable. TV is available. Many people read, rest, or doze off. Staff remain nearby throughout.
03
Pressurization & depressurization
Stay upright — equalize your ears
As the chamber pressurizes, stay upright — this helps significantly with ear pressure equalization. You'll notice a subtle sensation in your ears, similar to descending on an airplane. Equalize by swallowing, yawning, or the Valsalva maneuver (gently pinch your nose and blow softly). The same applies when depressurizing at the end — stay upright and equalize as needed. Once at pressure, you feel nothing unusual — just sitting comfortably.
04
During — 60 minutes
Breathe, rest, unwind
Breathe normally through the mask. Watch TV, read, or simply rest. The chamber does its work without any effort on your part. If you ever feel uncomfortable, staff can adjust or end the session.
05
After your session
Hydrate and notice
Drink water after your session. Most people feel clear-headed and calm — some notice a mild, pleasant energy lift. Effects build with consistent sessions over time rather than from a single visit.

Safety, Comfort & What to Know

At wellness pressure levels, HBOT has a strong safety profile. Understanding the full picture builds appropriate expectations.

What to expect at wellness pressure levels

Common and mild: Ear or sinus pressure during pressurization (like flying — equalizes easily by swallowing or yawning). Temporary mild fatigue or lightheadedness after the first session or two as your body adjusts. Dry mouth or nose from the oxygen delivery.

Less common: Temporary vision changes — a mild shift toward nearsightedness (myopia) that can develop over multiple sessions. This is well-documented and in the vast majority of cases fully resolves within days to weeks after sessions end. It happens because increased oxygen affects the crystalline lens of the eye. Important nuance: HBOT does not cause cataracts. However, if you have an early cataract already forming, HBOT may accelerate its maturation rate slightly. If you've already had cataract surgery (meaning your natural lens has been replaced), this does not apply to you. Headache in some first-timers, typically from not equalizing ear pressure adequately.

Rare at wellness pressures: Barotrauma (pressure injury to ears or sinuses) is rare but possible if equalization is not done properly — staff guidance on your first session significantly reduces this risk. Oxygen toxicity is a real concern at high clinical pressures with 100% oxygen — the risk profile at wellness pressure levels is substantially lower than clinical protocols, and is managed through appropriate pressure selection and session duration.

One important breathing reminder: Always breathe normally throughout your session. If you hold your breath during pressurization or depressurization, air in the lungs continues to expand as pressure changes — which in rare cases can cause a pneumothorax (lung overpressure injury). This is extremely rare and entirely avoidable: simply keep breathing normally.

Seizure history: A history of seizures is not an automatic contraindication, but does require provider approval and lower pressure sessions. Notably, research has shown that people with seizure disorders who use HBOT appropriately often see a decrease in both the frequency and intensity of seizure activity — but this must be managed in coordination with your neurologist or treating provider. Do not begin HBOT with a seizure history without discussing it with your doctor first.

Who should not use HBOT without medical clearance

Consult your doctor before using HBOT if you have: an untreated pneumothorax (collapsed lung), active ear or sinus infection, recent ear surgery, certain lung conditions (emphysema with CO2 retention), a history of spontaneous pneumothorax, uncontrolled high fever, or are pregnant. People with claustrophobia should discuss the seated chamber setup with us before booking — many find it significantly more accessible than they expect, but it's worth having the conversation. If you are on any medication, particularly those affecting oxygen sensitivity, check with your prescribing provider.

At our wellness pressure levels in a comfortable seated setup, the vast majority of people tolerate HBOT easily and well. Our staff walk every first-timer through equalization and monitor throughout the session.

Who It's For

🏃
Athletes & active recovery
Post-training muscle recovery, reduced soreness, faster return to performance. Many use it the day after hard training or competition.
🧠
Brain fog & cognitive support
People managing brain fog, cognitive fatigue, or looking to support mental clarity and focus. Consistent sessions reported to improve perceived cognitive function.
😴
Chronic fatigue & low energy
Those managing persistent fatigue or low-grade inflammation who want a non-stimulant approach to supporting energy and recovery at the cellular level.
🌿
General wellness optimization
People already committed to their health who want to add enhanced oxygenation to a stack that includes sauna, cold plunge, red light, and float therapy.
🔄
Post-viral fatigue & recovery support
Emerging research has explored HBOT's role in supporting recovery from post-viral fatigue, including persistent low energy and brain fog. An actively developing area of research — not a treatment claim, but a growing area of wellness interest.
Longevity & anti-aging
Mitochondrial function, inflammation reduction, and cellular repair are all relevant to healthy aging. HBOT's mechanisms align with the most evidence-informed longevity interventions.
🩸
Metabolic wellness & cellular energy
Research suggests HBOT supports cellular energy metabolism and insulin sensitivity at the cellular level — relevant for those focused on metabolic wellness and energy optimization. Important: if you use insulin or have diabetes, blood glucose can drop during sessions. You will need to get clearance from your healthcare provider before starting.

How HBOT Fits Your Wellness Routine

HBOT works well as a standalone practice. It compounds meaningfully when paired with the other services at Lost in Float — each addressing different but complementary aspects of recovery and performance.

  • Float therapy — Float addresses nervous system regulation and gravitational decompression; HBOT adds enhanced oxygenation. Together they cover both the relaxation-recovery axis and the cellular energy axis. Many members pair them on the same visit or alternate days.
  • Red light therapy — Red light stimulates mitochondrial ATP production through photobiomodulation; HBOT delivers more oxygen to fuel that production. The two work on the same cellular energy system through different inputs. Read the red light guide →
  • Sauna — Heat exposure and HBOT both drive inflammation modulation and circulatory response, through completely different mechanisms. Sauna on one day, HBOT on another is a practical pairing for members focused on inflammation management.
  • Cold plunge — Cold reduces inflammatory markers through vasoconstriction; HBOT addresses the oxygenation side of the same recovery equation. Together they address recovery from multiple angles simultaneously.

The Lost in Float Recovery Stack brings all of these together — HBOT is now part of that full stack — Gold and Platinum members can use membership credits toward HBOT. Bronze and Silver members receive 50% off every session. See membership options →

60
Minutes per session at Lost in Float. Hard-shell seated chamber. 1.3 to 2.0 ATA. 95–97% oxygen. TV available. Never lying flat in a narrow tube.

Honest Expectations

HBOT is not a cure and not a substitute for medical care, sleep, nutrition, or movement. At wellness pressure levels, it's a tool that supports the body's natural recovery and optimization processes — most effectively when used consistently as part of a broader routine.

Some people notice subtle clarity or energy after their first session. Others feel nothing unusual at first and notice cumulative effects building over weeks of regular use. Both experiences are normal. Individual results vary based on your baseline, what you're using it for, how consistently you come, and how it integrates with the rest of your routine.

When do meaningful benefits appear? Most people begin to notice real, sustained benefits somewhere between 25 and 50 hours of total HBOT time. At 60 minutes per session, that's 25–50 sessions. The most effective way to reach that threshold is 3–5 sessions per week. This isn't a number we've invented; it's the frequency used in the clinical studies that documented the strongest outcomes, and what practitioners like Dr. Jason Sonners of HBOT USA consistently point to for meaningful adaptation. Don't judge the therapy by session three.

A Lost in Float membership makes this frequency financially practical. Gold and Platinum members can use their membership credits toward HBOT sessions. Bronze and Silver members receive 50% off every HBOT session. The math matters: getting to 25–50 hours at drop-in pricing is expensive. A membership is how this becomes a sustainable practice.

Experience HBOT in Lincoln

Hard-shell seated chamber · 1.3 to 2.0 ATA · 95–97% oxygen · 60-minute sessions · Gold & Platinum: use membership credits · Bronze & Silver: 50% off every session.

See membership tiers → Book another service

Frequently Asked Questions

QWhat's the difference between this and clinical HBOT?
Different tools designed for different purposes — not a hierarchy. Clinical medical HBOT operates at higher pressures (2.0–3.0 ATA) with 100% medical-grade oxygen in hospital settings, for specific diagnosed conditions requiring that level of intensity. Wellness HBOT operates at lower pressures using concentrated oxygen — a protocol that research shows produces genuine benefit for recovery, inflammation, cognitive support, and general wellness without the intensity or oversight requirements of hospital-grade settings. The core mechanisms are the same; the application and depth differ.
QWill it feel claustrophobic?
Our setup is specifically designed to minimize this concern. You sit in a reclining chair in a chamber that's much more spacious than most people expect — not a narrow tube. Many people who identify as claustrophobic find our seated setup comfortable. If you have concerns, mention it when you book and we'll walk you through what to expect before your first session.
QIs there anything to do during the session?
The chamber is air conditioned — you won't feel hot. TV is available, and you're welcome to bring a book, rest, or fall asleep. Most people find it genuinely comfortable and relaxing. For safety reasons, we ask that battery-powered personal devices not be brought into the chamber.
QHow often should I come?
For meaningful, sustained benefit, 3–5 sessions per week is where the research and experienced practitioners point. Most people begin to notice real cumulative effects somewhere between 25 and 50 total hours — which at 60 minutes per session means 25–50 sessions. Getting there faster (3–5x per week) means you'll notice and sustain the benefits sooner. Starting at 1–2 sessions per week is fine while you're getting oriented; building to 3–5x is where it becomes a genuine wellness practice. Athletes in active training phases often go daily. Start where you can and build.
QHow do I equalize my ears?
As the chamber pressurizes, you may feel a sensation in your ears similar to descending in an airplane. Equalize by swallowing, yawning, or using the Valsalva maneuver — pinch your nose gently and blow softly. It should resolve quickly. Our staff guide you through this on your first session so you know exactly what to do and when.
QI have a medical condition or take medication — can I still do HBOT?
If you have any medical condition or are taking any medication, you will need to get approval from your physician before starting HBOT. That guidance needs to come from them, not us — we are a wellness center, not a medical provider. Once you have clearance, let our staff know at booking so we can make sure your experience is appropriate and comfortable.
QHBOT sounds expensive — how do you make it accessible?
HBOT is one of the more significant wellness investments — sessions at independent clinics typically run $150–$300 each, and meaningful benefit accumulates over 25–50 sessions. We've built our pricing to make consistent access as practical as possible: Gold and Platinum members can use their membership credits toward HBOT sessions. Bronze and Silver members receive 50% off every HBOT session. All members receive 50% off any additional sessions beyond their credits. We also accept HSA and FSA payments — see the next question for details. Ask us at booking if you have questions about the best way to structure your sessions.
QCan I use my HSA or FSA for HBOT?
We accept HSA (Health Savings Account) and FSA (Flexible Spending Account) payments. Whether HBOT is a covered expense depends on your specific plan — coverage varies by carrier and plan type. We recommend checking with your HSA/FSA administrator before booking to confirm eligibility. If covered, you'll typically need to submit your receipt to your plan for reimbursement. Ask us at the time of booking and we'll make sure you have what you need.

A note on medical care: The information in this post is educational and based on published research. HBOT at Lost in Float is a wellness service, not a medical treatment. It is not a replacement for professional medical care. If you are managing a health condition, please continue working with your healthcare provider. HBOT may complement that care — it is not a substitute for it.

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Lost in Float · Lincoln, NE · Since 2017

Breathe deeper. Recover faster.

Comfortable seated HBOT — 60 minutes, TV available. Included with Gold & Platinum membership. Bronze & Silver members get 50% off.

See membership tiers → Book another service