| Literature DB >> 18955301 |
Arne Simon1, Kirsten Traynor, Kai Santos, Gisela Blaser, Udo Bode, Peter Molan.
Abstract
While the ancient Egyptians and Greeks used honey for wound care, and a broad spectrum of wounds are treated all over the world with natural unprocessed honeys from different sources, Medihoney has been one of the first medically certified honeys licensed as a medical product for professional wound care in Europe and Australia. Our experience with medical honey in wound care refers only to this product. In this review, we put our clinical experience into a broader perspective to comment on the use of medical honey in wound care. More prospective randomized studies on a wider range of types of wounds are needed to confirm the safety and efficacy of medical honey in wound care. Nonetheless, the current evidence confirming the antibacterial properties and additional beneficial effects of medical honey on wound healing should encourage other wound care professionals to use CE-certified honey dressings with standardized antibacterial activity, such as Medihoney products, as an alternative treatment approach in wounds of different natures.Entities:
Keywords: MRSA; Medical honey; wound care
Year: 2008 PMID: 18955301 PMCID: PMC2686636 DOI: 10.1093/ecam/nem175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1.Pictures of different Leptospermum spp. plants from Australia.
Figure 2.Thoracotomy wound of a patient with acute myeloic leukemia after surgical site infection (Medihoney™ was applied on a calcium-alginate dressing and left in the wound for 24 h).
Key information from this review
| What makes medical honey effective? | Medical honey is hygroscopic, meaning it draws moisture out of the environment and thus dehydrates bacteria. The enzyme glucose oxidase, produces gluconic acid and minute amounts of hydrogen peroxide when in contact with the wound surface. In addition, each charge contains light- and heat-stable, |
| Why is medical honey irradiated? | Honey may contain spores from |
| What is Medihoney™? | Medihoney is a mixture of two honeys derived from Australia and New Zealand containing glucose oxidase and |
| Legal background | Medihoney™ is licensed for wound care in Australia, Europe and the USA. In Europe a CE-certification exists declaring Medihoney™ as medical product. |
| Practical advances | Medical honey dressings are easy to change without pain and without harm to the regenerating tissue. Malodour from recalcitrant wounds as a result of critical colonization and partial tissue necrosis is successfully abandoned with medical honey due to its antibacterial, anti-inflammatory and debriding effects. Medical honey can be used in all different stages of wound healing, in many different types of wounds and even in patients with diabetes. Medical honey is well accepted by most patients and their families. |
| Drawbacks | Some patients (5 out of 100) experience pain after the application of medical honey to the wound. In some of them, treatment with medical honey has to be stopped. Few patients with pre-existing atopic diseases show local atopic reactions. No severe systemic atopic reaction due to medical honey has been reported in the literature. Medical honey has to be kept in the wound for 12–24 h a day. Thus, it is combined with particular dressings like calcium alginates of hydrofiber dressings, which add substantially to the overall cost of treatment. Depending on the amount of exudate, the dressing with medical honey has to be changed up to 2 times a day in acute inflammatory wounds. The most often practised change interval for medical honey dressings is every 24–48 h. |
| Scientific evidence | For Medihoney™: one prospectively randomized controlled study considering the prevention of catheter-related bacteremias in patients with dialysis catheters. Many |
#For the medical use of honey in general please refer to the outstanding review of Peter Molan from 2006 (15)