A lot of factors increase the probability of an oxygen toxicity hit including stress, physical exertion, and cold. These factors are dramatically minimized in a treatment chamber. Also, it is very unusual that severe reactions like convulsions are the first recognizable symptoms, especially to a trained chamber attendant who is not suffering from narcosis as a deep diver might. The attendant or dive super will yank you off O2 at their first suspicion.
As knotical implied, the worse thing likely to happen if you did convulse is a bitten lip and tongue, maybe a bump in your head, and an attendant looking for a new job. It is possible, but the benefits far out-weigh the risks.
I have treated and been onboard for dozens of table five and six treatments and have never witnessed an O2 hit. The same for hundreds of Sur-D-O2 (Surface Decompression using Oxygen) dives — a prevalent procedure in military and commercial surface diving. This is also true for most of the US Navy Master Divers and diving supervisors I have known. I have heard of a few hits in my career, but most were hyperbaric medical patients whose physical condition was compromised in many different ways.
I saw some French commercial divers running Sur-D-O2 at [-]almost 3[/-] 4 ATA/30 Meters in the early 1970s. I wasn’t around enough to know if they had toxicity hits, but that is too rich for my peace of mind.