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Honey Saves Diabetics from
Amputation
SPREADING honey on a
diabetic ulcer could prevent the need to amputate an infected foot,
researchers say.
A doctor at the University of Wisconsin who helped about half a dozen of her
diabetic patients avoid amputation has launched a controlled trial to
promote the widespread use of honey therapy.
The therapy involves squeezing a thick layer of honey onto the wound after
dead skin and bacteria have been removed.
The honey kills bacteria because it is acidic and avoids the complication of
bacterial resistance found with standard antibiotics, Jennifer Eddy, a
professor at the University's School of Medicine and Public Health, told.
"This is a tremendously important issue for world health," Eddy said.
Diabetics typically have poor circulation and decreased ability to fight
infection and ulcers can be hard to treat. An amputation is performed every
30 seconds somewhere in the world, Eddy said.
"If we can prove that honey promotes healing in diabetic ulcers, we can
offer new hopes for many patients, not to mention the cost benefit, and the
issue of bacterial resistance. The possibilities are tremendous."
Honey therapy is already used to treat bed sores in New Zealand and as an
alternative form of medicine in Europe, but has largely been relegated to
history books in the United States.
Eddy first heard of it in medical school when a professor commented that of
all the ancient remedies, honey actually seemed to work when he tried it out
in the laboratory.
She tried honey therapy as a last resort six years ago with a 79-year-old
diabetic patient who had developed foot wounds resistant to standard
treatments.
"I tried it only after everything else had failed and... we had essentially
sent him home to die," she said. "All antibiotics were stopped when we
started honey, and his wounds rapidly healed."
Eddy hopes to have the trial completed and the results published by 2008 or
2009.●
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