A household
remedy millennia old is being reinstated: honey helps
the treatment of some wounds better than the most
modern antibiotics. For several years now medical
experts from the University of Bonn have been clocking
up largely positive experience with what is known
as medihoney. Even chronic wounds infected with multi-resistant
bacteria often healed within a few weeks. In conjunction
with colleagues from Düsseldorf, Homburg and
Berlin they now want to test the experience gained
in a large-scale study, as objective data on the
curative properties of honey are thin on the ground.
The fact that honey can help wounds to heal is something
that was known to the Ancient Egyptians several thousand
years ago. And in the last two world wars poultices
with honey were used to assist the healing process
in soldiers' wounds. However, the rise of the new
antibiotics replaced this household remedy. 'In hospitals
today we are faced with germs which are resistant
to almost all the current anti-biotics,' Dr. Arne
Simon explains. 'As a result, the medical use of
honey is becoming attractive again for the treatment
of wounds.'
Dr. Simon works on the cancer ward of the Bonn University
Children's Clinic. As far as the treatment of wounds
is concerned, his young patients form part of a high-risk
group: the medication used to treat cancer known
as cytostatics not only slows down the reproduction
of malignant cells, but also impairs the healing
process of wounds. 'Normally a skin injury heals
in a week, with our children it often takes a month
or more,' he says. Moreover, children with leukaemia
have a weakened immune system. If a germ enters their
bloodstream via a wound, the result may be a fatal
case of blood poisoning.
For several years now Bonn paediatricians have been
pioneering the use in Germany of medihoney in treating
wounds. Medihoney bears the CE seal for medical products;
its quality is regularly tested. The success is astonishing:
'Dead tissue is rejected faster, and the wounds heals
more rapidly,' Kai Sofka, wound specialist at the
University Children's Clinic, emphasises. 'What is
more, changing dressings is less painful, since the
poultices are easier to remove without damaging the
newly formed layers of skin.' Some wounds often smell
unpleasant – an enormous strain on the patient.
Yet honey helps here too by reducing the smell. 'Even
wounds which consistently refused to heal for years
can, in our experience, be brought under control
with medihoney – and this frequently happens
within a few weeks,' Kai Sofka says.
In the meantime two dozen hospitals in Germany are
using honey in their treatment of wounds. Despite
all the success there have hitherto been very few
reliable clinical studies of its effectiveness. In
conjunction with colleagues from Düsseldorf,
Homburg and Berlin, the Bonn medical staff now want
to remedy this. With the Woundpecker Data Bank, which
they have developed themselves, they will be recording
and evalu-ating over 100 courses of disease over
the next few months. The next step planned is comparative
studies with other therapeutic methods such as the
very expensive cationic silver dressings. 'These
too are an effective anti-bacterial method,' says
Dr. Arne Simon. 'However, it is not yet clear whether
the silver released from some dressings may lead
to side-effects among children.' Effective bacteria
killer
It has already been proved that medihoney even puts
paid to multi-resistant germs such as MRSA. In this
respect medihoney is neck and neck in the race to
beat the antibiotic mupirocin, currently the local
MRSA antibiotic of choice. This is shown by a study
recently published by researchers in Australia. In
one point medihoney was even superior to its rival:
the bacteria did not develop any resistance to the
natural product during the course of treatment.
It is also known today why honey has an antiseptic
effect: when producing honey, bees add an enzyme
called glucose-oxidase. This enzyme ensures that
small amounts of hydrogen peroxide, an effective
antiseptic, are constantly being formed from the
sugar in the honey. The advantage over the hydrogen
peroxide from the chemist's is that small concentrations
are sufficient to kill the germs, as it is constantly
being produced. As a rule much larger quantities
of hydrogen peroxide would have to be used, as hydrogen
peroxide loses its potency over time. However, in
large concentrations it not only damages the bacteria,
but also the skin cells.
Furthermore, medihoney consists of two different
types of honey: one which forms a comparatively large
amount of hydrogen peroxide, and another known as
'lepto-spermum honey'. Leptospermum is a species
of tree which occurs in New Zealand and Australia.
Honey from these trees has a particularly strong
anti-bacterial effect, even in a 10% dilution. 'It
is not yet known exactly why this is,' Dr. Arne Simon
says. 'Probably it is a mix of phenol-type substances
which come from the plant and make life particularly
difficult for the bacteria in the wound.'
|