Monofloral honeys continue to show effectiveness in healing wounds. No matter where they are located, honey bees make good medicine...
THE
EFFICACY OF GELAM HONEY DRESSING TOWARDS EXCISIONAL WOUND HEALING
E-CAM, 2012,
May 18
Abstract:
Honey is
one of the oldest substances used in wound management. Efficacy of Gelam honey
in wound healing was evaluated in this paper.
Sprague-Dawley
rats were randomly divided into four groups of 24 rats each (untreated group,
saline group, Intrasite Gel group, and Gelam honey group) with 2 cm by 2 cm
full thickness, excisional wound created on neck area. Wounds were dressed
topically according to groups. Rats were sacrificed on days 1, 5, 10, and 15 of
treatments. Wounds were then processed for macroscopic and histological
observations.
Gelam-honey-dressed
wounds healed earlier (day 13) than untreated and saline treated groups, as did
wounds treated with Intrasite Gel. Honey-treated wounds exhibited less scab and
only thin scar formations. Histological features demonstrated positive effects
of Gelam honey on the wounds.
This paper
showed that Gelam honey dressing on excisional wound accelerated the process of
wound healing.
Intro:
Wound healing is a
complex biological cascade of cellular and biochemical events comprised of
three phases: inflammation, proliferation, and maturation... A rapid increase of
interest in the use of honey as wound dressing among researchers and modern
practitioners includes case studies and clinical trials reporting the
effectiveness of honey in the treatment of different types of wounds, with some
showing effectiveness against bacterial strains resistant to synthetic
antibiotics...
Day 10: (i) none (ii) saline (iii) gel (iv) honey |
Honey Sample:
Gelam honey
is a local monofloral honey produced by Apis mellifera bees from the flora
source of Gelam (Melaleuca spp.) tree... The honey was obtained by the normal procedure of centrifuging the
cut comb in a stainless steel container and filtered once by using a fine
muslin cloth. The honey used was sterilized by gamma-irradiation (25 kGy) and
kept at laboratory temperature (20°C), away from direct sunlight in aluminum
foil covered glass bottle...
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