|
BC Medical Journal
Volume 49, Number
8,
October 2007, page 428

Case report

More
success with honey
When conventional treatments fail or are
unavailable, consider honey as a topical wound dressing.
Tony Wilson, MD
Dr Wilson is a family physician practising in
Vancouver, British Columbia. He volunteers with Rokpa
Canada.
ROKPA CANADA is a division of Rokpa International, which
is a Tibetan aid organization founded in 1980 by a
Tibetan doctor and meditation master to provide
assistance in the areas of health care, education,
relief from hunger, poverty, and suffering, and
preservation of culture and environment.
ROKPA CANADA
223-4438 West 10th Ave
Vancouver, BC V6R 4R8
rokpa@telus.net

I read with practical interest the article in the March
2007 BCMJ “Sweet success? Honey as a topical wound
dressing” [BCMJ 2007;49:64-67] by Nevio Cimolai, MD.
In August 2005 as a member of a medical team whose
mission is to run a yearly clinic delivering free health
care to poor Tibetan nomads in Yushu (Yushu Autonomous
Prefecture, Qinghai, China), we were faced with a
challenging case. A teenage girl () had four large,
full-thickness pressure sores on her sacrum and hips (),
the consequence of a prolonged hospital stay. She
survived, with paralysis below the waist, a bout of
bacterial meningitis. We visited the girl at home where
her parents’ treatments consisted of the following:
• A cloth covering the (remarkably clean) sores to keep
the flies away.
• A rope from the ceiling to assist transfers.
Medical care is costly in Tibet and there is no health
insurance scheme; to purchase the basics for care the
family had had to sell their small front yard to a
neighbor. Standard treatment in Canada would include at
least antibiotics, complex dressings, wound-care
nursing, OT/PT assistance, special mattresses, and
possibly plastic surgery—all beyond this family’s means
and that of our emergency contingency fund.
Fortunately the team nurse had experience in just such
circumstances and suggested the use of a honey-sugar mix
(increased viscosity to stick in place), applied twice
daily. Within 5 days the edges appeared vividly
hyperemic and healthier. As we left for Canada shortly
thereafter, we left the parents with some funds and
instructions to continue the treatment, not knowing what
to expect in the long term. The next year’s team in 2006
found the patient much improved with considerable
closure of the sores (). Follow-up during my recent
visit in August 2007 revealed that the patient continues
to improve.
Although anecdotal and a study of one, this case has
been a “sweet success” so far, for reasons that I now
understand from Dr Cimolai’s article. In similar adverse
circumstances, it may well be the first and only
treatment when more conventional therapies are
unavailable.



|