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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: topical honey + diabetic ulcers + diabetic  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/1/2008)

How Manuka Honey Kills MRSA and Heals Staph Infections
PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria - Jun 19, 2008
Since antibiotics don't work and some topical agents cause tissue damage, Manuka Honey is being considered a favorable healing agent. ...
Manuka Honey as a First Line of Defense Against Infection
ClickPress (press release), UK - Jun 11, 2008
These additional antibacterial and antimicrobial components make Manuka Honey ideal as a topical solution for the treatment of bacterial infections, ...
2008 NBA Draft Diary
NBADraft.net - Jun 27, 2008
Very topical. He is also wearing platform shoes and has pegged his suit pants. Someone get him a calendar. 4:13 - With the second pick, the Miami Heat ...

PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung)
Manuka Honey and Wound Care
PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria - Jun 9, 2008
There are many ways in which Manuka Honey can be used, particularly for topical use on the skin. There is growing anecdotal evidence that Manuka Honey is ...

BigNews.biz (press release)
Therapeutic Benefit of Manuka Honey in Wound Care
BigNews.biz (press release), MA - Jun 3, 2008
In comparing the use of Manuka Honey dressings with topical antiseptics on wound infections, it has been found that Manuka Honey dressings significantly ...

PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung)
How to Treat MRSA and Staph Infections
PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria - Jun 13, 2008
Honeymark's First Aid Antiseptic Lotion is an effective topical solution when treating MRSA. In addition to Active Manuka Honey, this product also contains ...
The truth about vinegar
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH - Jun 23, 2008
And, unlike topical creams, routine doses seem to prevent arthritis aches, Jerry says. "There's probably a lot of truth to the adage 'an apple a day keeps ...
Hay fever: why it is worse this year
Daily Mail, UK - Jun 20, 2008
Topical anti-allergy agents for itchy mouth and eyes or a runny nose often contain a short-acting substance called sodium cromoglycate, which means they ...
Philippines: Healing nature of onions
FreshPlaza, Netherlands - Jun 24, 2008
... are used in the treatment of topical scars. In virile disorders, one should take onion-juice with honey daily in the morning for two to three weeks. ...

Best Syndication
Hair Loss ? Onion Treatment for Hair Loss
Best Syndication, CA - Jun 1, 2008
A study published in June 2002 in the Journal of Dermatology talks about the efficacy of topical onion extract against alopecia areata, better known as hair ...
Source: Google News

[PDF] Topical honey for diabetic foot ulcers -
JJ Eddy, MD Gideonsen - J Fam Pract, 2005 - jfponline.com
... to know Look for these topics in Applied Evidence Coming soon in JFP Topical
honey for diabetic foot ulcers ? cost. 13 Given honey ...

Honey: A Potent Agent for Wound Healing?. -
PE Lusby, A Coombes, JM Wilkinson, FET GradDip - Journal of Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nursing, 2002 - jwocnonline.com
... were of varied etiology, such as Fourniers gangrene, burns, cancrum oris, diabetic
ulcers, traumatic ulcers ... Following topical application of honey, 58 of the ...

[CITATION] Local application of honey for treatment of neonatal postoperative wound infection -
A Vardi, Z Barzilay, N Linder, HA Cohen, G Paret, … - Acta Paediatrica, 1998 - Blackwell Synergy
... 4, 14), burns (7, 12), diabetic ulcers (12), malignancy ... systemic antibiotic treatment
and topical treatment with ... at the beginning of local honey application, in ...

Healing of an MRSA-colonized, hydroxyurea-induced leg ulcer with honey -
S Natarajan, D Williamson, J Grey, KG Harding, RA … - Journal of Dermatological Treatment, 2001 - ingentaconnect.com
... treated with topical application of manuka honey ... Keywords: Honey ? Hydroxyurea ?
Leg ulcer ? MRSA Received 8th ... of venous, arter- ial or diabetic aetiology ...

The Evidence Supporting the Use of Honey as a Wound Dressing -
PC Molan - The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds, 2006 - ijl.sagepub.com
... was treated with silver sulfadiazine and antibiotics instead of honey for 1 ... such
as Fournier?s gangrene, burns, cancrum oris, diabetic ulcers, traumatic ul ...

Advances in Wound Care and Healing Technology. -
S Natarajan, D Williamson, AJ Stiltz, K Harding - American Journal of Clinical Dermatology, 2000 - dermatology.adisonline.com
... although a nourishing diet and use of honey, occlusive dressings, topical gels,
and ... and chronic wounds, such as pressure sores, diabetic foot ulcers ...

Topical phenytoin for wound healing -
A Bhatia, S Prakash - Dermatol Online J, 2004 - dermatology.cdlib.org
... Phenytoin has also been examined in the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers [17]. ...
Oluwatosin et al. compared topical phenytoin with honey dressings for the ...

Honey Lowers Plasma Glucose, C-Reactive Protein, Homocysteine, and Blood Lipids in Healthy, Diabetic -
NS Al-Waili - Journal of Medicinal Food, 2004 - liebertonline.com
... urinary diseases, gastrointestinal diseases, skin ulcers, wounds, eczema ... levels in
normal and alloxan-diabetic rabbits. ... we have found that honey increased blood ...

Treatment of an infected venous leg ulcer with honey dressings -
A Alcaraz, J Kelly - Br J Nurs, 2002 - internurse.com
... burns (Efem, 1988; Subrahmanyam, 1998, 1999), diabetic foot ulcers and ... RCN, London
Subrahmanyam M (1991) Topical application of honey in treatment ...

Honey as a topical antibacterial agent for treatment of infected wounds -
PC Molan - American J. Clinical Dermatology, 2001 - worldwidewounds.com
... Honey is a traditional topical treatment for infected wounds. ... Honey has been used
to treat infections in a ... leg ulcers of mixed aetiology, diabetic foot ulcers ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

UW study tests topical honey as a treatment for diabetic ulcers

May 2, 2007

The sore on Catrina Hurlburt's leg simply wouldn't heal.

Complications from a 2002 car accident left Hurlburt, a borderline diabetic, with recurring cellulitis and staph infections. One of those infections developed into a troublesome open sore that, despite the use of oral antibiotics, continued to fester for nearly eight months.

Then Hurlburt's physician, Jennifer Eddy of UW Health's Eau Claire Family Medicine Clinic, suggested she try using topical honey.

Within a matter of months, the sore had healed completely.

"I remember thinking, holy mackerel-what a difference," says Hurlburt, who can't use topical antibiotics because of allergies. "It's a lot better than having to put oral antibiotics into your system."

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Photo of honey bees on a honeycomb

Experts believe that treating wounds with honey has tremendous potential for the approximately 200 million people in the world with diabetes, 15 percent of whom will develop an ulcer, usually because of impaired sensation in their feet.

 

With funding provided by the Wisconsin Partnership Fund for Health and the American Academy of Family Physicians Foundation, Eddy is currently conducting the first randomized, double-blind controlled trial of honey for diabetic ulcers. Eddy first successfully used honey therapy a few years ago with a patient who was facing amputation after all medical options had been exhausted.

Experts believe that treating wounds with honey has tremendous potential for the approximately 200 million people in the world with diabetes, 15 percent of whom will develop an ulcer, usually because of impaired sensation in their feet. Currently, every 30 seconds someone somewhere in the world undergoes amputation for a diabetic foot ulcer. In 2001, treating diabetic ulcers and amputations in U.S. patients cost $10.9 billion.

"Patients like Catrina Hurlburt are a great example of the potential health care savings," explains Eddy, who is also assistant professor of family medicine at University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. "Unsuccessful conventional care for ulcers can cost thousands of dollars. Therapy with honey may only cost a few hundred."

Diabetics typically have poor circulation and decreased ability to fight infection. Diabetic ulcers treated with long courses of systemic antibiotics can become colonized with drug-resistant organisms-so-called "superbugs" such as Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Since honey fights bacteria in numerous ways, it is essentially immune to resistance. Honey's acidic pH, low water content (which effectively dehydrates bacteria), and the hydrogen peroxide secreted by its naturally-occurring enzymes make it ideal for combating organisms that have developed resistance to standard antibiotics. “Unsuccessful conventional care for ulcers can cost thousands of dollars. Therapy with honey may only cost a few hundred.”

Jennifer Eddy, assistant professor of family medicine

"This is a tremendously important issue for public health," explains Eddy, adding that the Centers for Disease Control and the

World Health Organization have identified bacterial resistance as one of the most important medical problems of our day.

Patients in the clinical trial will receive ulcer care and treatment by an expert podiatrist. Half will be randomly assigned to receive honey, while the other half will receive a wound-care gel that has been compounded with inert components to give it the flavor and color of honey. The ulcers will be measured to see how quickly they heal, to evaluate whether honey or the standard wound gel is better for healing.

If honey proves the more effective method, Eddy cautions patients against using it at home without a physician's involvement. "Unfortunately, diabetic ulcers are very complicated, and honey would only be part of the solution," she says. Successful care also requires off-loading-avoiding walking and putting weight on the sore-and the sterile removal of dead skin and bacteria from the wound.

"If we can prove that honey promotes healing in diabetic ulcers, we can offer new hope for many patients," says Eddy. "Not to mention the cost benefit, and the issue of bacterial resistance. The possibilities are tremendous."

To be eligible for the study, patients must be older than 18, have diabetes and a sore below their knee, and not be taking prednisone. Interested patients can call (715) 855-5683 for further information on the study or outreach opportunities.

 
 
 
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