Honey has a protective effect on the body and in the body. Honey has elevated levels of antioxidants and a unique compound, glucose oxidase, which heals wounds by slowly releasing low doses of a form of hydrogen peroxide to destroy bacteria and not the surrounding tissue...
Honey may have a therapeutic effect in protecting
organs during inflammatory diseases.
Gelam Honey
Has a Protective Effect against Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-Induced Organ Failure
Int. J.Mol. Sci, 2012, May 23
Gelam honey
exerts anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activities and is thought to have
potent effects in reducing infections and healing wounds.
The aim of
this study was to investigate the effects of intravenously-injected Gelam honey
in protecting organs from lethal doses of lipopolysaccharide (LPS).
Six groups
of rabbits (N = 6) were used in this study. Two groups acted as controls and
received only saline and no LPS injections. For the test groups, 1 mL honey
(500 mg/kg in saline) was intravenously injected into two groups (treated),
while saline (1 mL) was injected into the other two groups (untreated); after 1
h, all four test groups were intravenously-injected with LPS (0.5 mg/kg). Eight
hours after the LPS injection, blood and organs were collected from three
groups (one from each treatment stream) and blood parameters were measured and
biochemical tests, histopathology, and myeloperoxidase assessment were
performed. For survival rate tests, rabbits from the remaining three groups
were monitored over a 2-week period.
Treatment
with honey showed protective effects on organs through the improvement of organ
blood parameters, reduced infiltration of neutrophils, and decreased
myeloperoxidase activity.
Honey-treated
rabbits also showed reduced mortality after LPS injection compared with
untreated rabbits.
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