Wounds heal better with honey and many studies confirm this, from horses to dogs to people...
A
Preliminary Study on the Effect of Manuka Honey on Second-Intention Healing of
Contaminated Wounds on the Distal Aspect of the Forelimbs of Horses
VeterinarySurgery, 20 Sept 2011
To
determine the effect of manuka honey on second-intention healing of
contaminated, full-thickness skin wounds in horses.
Methods
One wound
was created on the dorsomedial aspect of the third metacarpus in both
forelimbs, contaminated with feces, and bandaged for 24 hours. Bandages were
removed and wounds rinsed with isotonic saline solution. Wounds on 1 limb had
manuka honey applied daily (n = 8) whereas wounds on the contralateral limb
received no treatment (n = 8). Bandages were replaced and changed daily for 12
days, after which treatment stopped, bandages were removed, leaving wounds open
to heal. Wound area was measured 24 hours after wound creation (day 1), then
weekly for 8 weeks. Overall time for healing was recorded. Wound area and rate
of healing of treated and control wounds were compared statistically.
Results
Treatment
with manuka honey decreased wound retraction and treated wounds remained
significantly smaller than control wounds until day 42; however, there was no
difference in overall healing time between treatment and control wounds.
Conclusions
Treatment
with manuka honey reduced wound area by reducing retraction but did not affect
overall healing time of full-thickness distal limb wounds using this
wound-healing model.
No comments:
Post a Comment