Manataka
American Indian Council
Honey is more effective in
treating difficult-to-heal wounds than antibiotics, says Jennifer Eddy,
a professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public
Health. Even methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, the so-called
flesh eating bacterium is no match for the antibiotic compounds the bees
manufacture for us - for free.
That resistance is getting more
and more problematic as hospitals become a
breeding ground for infections.
Not only wounds are healed by
honey, apparently there are also anti-viral properties in honey. Here is
an anecdote from the time of the 1918 Spanish Flu epidemic: "During the 1918 Spanish
Flu epidemic, my dad was a little boy, 8 years old, in Stockton,
California. His dad was a beekeeper, and kept some filled honeycombs
in a closet in the house. During the epidemic, the
family members would go into that closet and eat some of the fresh
honey every day, whenever they wanted. The flu decimated the
population of Stockton, including the families of their neighbors.
Next door, only one little boy survived, and when he came out of the
house, they couldn't recognize him, he was so emaciated. Other whole
families were entirely wiped out. They piled corpses in the streets,
as there weren't enough healthy men to bury them. Dad's (large) family
escaped the flu intact. It skipped their house completely. Dad
always said he thought it was something in the honey they ate that
protected them. He may have been right. I
recently read that they've discovered that honey has a compound that
turns into something like hydrogen peroxide inside you. For whatever
it's worth, this gives some protection from viruses." Honey could also save limbs
that might otherwise need to be amputated, as our standard medical
treatments fail. Here is the article in Wired which provided the
stimulus for this post: Honey Remedy Could Save
Limbs When Jennifer Eddy first saw an
ulcer on the left foot of her patient, an elderly diabetic man, it was
pink and quarter-sized. Fourteen months later, drug-resistant bacteria
had made it an unrecognizable black mess. Doctors tried everything they
knew -- and failed. After five hospitalizations, four surgeries and
regimens of antibiotics, the man had lost two toes. Doctors wanted to
remove his entire foot. "He preferred death to
amputation, and everybody agreed he was going to die if he didn't get an
amputation," said Eddy, a professor at the University of Wisconsin
School of Medicine and Public Health. With standard techniques
exhausted, Eddy turned to a treatment used by ancient Sumerian
physicians, touted in the Talmud and praised by Hippocrates: honey. Eddy
dressed the wounds in honey-soaked gauze. In just two weeks, her
patient's ulcers started to heal. Pink flesh replaced black. A year
later, he could walk again. "I've used honey in a dozen
cases since then," said Eddy. "I've yet to have one that didn't
improve." Eddy is one of many doctors to
recently rediscover honey as medicine. Abandoned with the advent of
antibiotics in the 1940s and subsequently disregarded as folk quackery,
a growing set of clinical literature and dozens of glowing anecdotes now
recommend it. Most tantalizingly, honey seems
capable of combating the
growing scourge
of drug-resistant wound infections, especially methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus, or
MRSA,
the infamous flesh-eating strain. These have become alarmingly more
common in recent years, with MRSA alone responsible for half of all skin
infections treated in U.S. emergency rooms. So-called superbugs cause
thousands of deaths and disfigurements every year, and public health
officials are
alarmed.
Though the practice is uncommon
in the United States, honey is successfully used elsewhere on wounds and
burns that are unresponsive to other treatments. Some of the most
promising results come from Germany's Bonn University Children's
Hospital, where doctors have used honey to treat wounds in 50 children
whose normal healing processes were weakened by chemotherapy. The children, said pediatric
oncologist Arne Simon, fared consistently better than those with the
usual applications of iodine, antibiotics and silver-coated dressings.
The only adverse effects were pain in 2 percent of the children and one
incidence of eczema. These risks, he said, compare favorably to iodine's
possible thyroid effects and the unknowns of silver -- and honey is also
cheaper. "We're dealing with chronic
wounds, and every intervention which heals a chronic wound is cost
effective, because most of those patients have medical histories of
months or years," he said. While Eddy bought honey at a
supermarket, Simon used
Medihoney,
one of several varieties made from species of Leptospermum flowers found
in New Zealand and Australia.
Honey, formed when bees
swallow, digest and regurgitate nectar, contains approximately 600
compounds, depending on the type of flower and bee. Leptospermum honeys
are renowned for their efficacy and dominate the commercial market,
though scientists aren't totally sure why they work. "All honey is antibacterial,
because the bees add an enzyme that makes hydrogen peroxide," said Peter
Molan, director of the Honey Research Unit at the University of Waikato
in New Zealand. "But we still haven't managed to identify the active
components. All we know is (the honey) works on an extremely broad
spectrum." Attempts in the lab to induce a
bacterial resistance to honey have failed, Molan and Simon said. Honey's
complex attack, they said, might make adaptation impossible. Two dozen German hospitals are
experimenting with medical honeys, which are also used in the United
Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. In the United States, however, honey
as an antibiotic is nearly unknown. American doctors remain skeptical
because studies on honey come from abroad and some are imperfectly
designed, Molan said. In a
"In some, antibiotics won't
work at all," he said. "People are dying from these infections." Commercial medical honeys are
available online in the United States, and one company has applied for
Food and Drug Administration approval. In the meantime, more complete
clinical research is imminent. The German hospitals are documenting
their cases in a database built by Simon's team in Bonn, while Eddy is
conducting the first double-blind study. "The more we keep giving
antibiotics, the more we breed these superbugs. Wounds end up being
repositories for them," Eddy said. "By eradicating them, honey could do
a great job for society and to improve public health."
Honey Mixture Improves Skin Conditions
Honey as a topical antibacterial agent for treatment of
infected wounds
Harnessing honey's healing power
The Evidence Supporting the Use of Honey as a Wound
Dressing
APIMEDICA Presentation: Therapeutic Uses of Honey ' This anonymous article should be taken
with a grain of salt, but it does stimulate thought and of course
anyone is free to decide whether to try what is proposed or not... It is found that mixture of Honey and Cinnamon
cures most of the diseases. Honey is produced in most countries of the
world. Ayurvedic as well as Yunani medicine have been using honey as a
vital medicine for centuries. Scientists of today also accept honey as a
"Ram Ban" (very effective) medicine for all kinds of diseases. Honey can
be used without any side effects for any kind of diseases.
UK Nursing Magazine Outlines Evidence for Use of Honey in
Wound Care Sources: posted by Sepp Hasslberger
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/medtech/0,71925-0.html
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Honey Heals
Your Wounds
Meanwhile,
antibiotics are losing much of their appeal as many common bacteria
develop resistance. Chickens are fed grains mixed with antibiotics,
calves and pigs are routinely injected as a "precaution". Pharmaceutical
companies are
pushing antibiotics
as the solution to all health problems in animal husbandry. We eat the
residues of these antibiotics in many of our foods, and of course
bacteria, being exposed to the drugs at every turn, find ways to resist
their deadly properties.
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