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September 29 2001
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Maggots Speed Wound Healing

 

Maggots are being used more and more frequently as a safe, effective means of speeding healing in patients recovering from serious wounds.

In fact, experts say the increasing popularity of maggots for wound debridement -- the removal of dead or damaged tissue and dirt from the wound surface -- may signal the resurgence of a very old treatment.

In the first half of the 20th century, maggot debridement therapy was used by thousands of surgeons in hundreds of hospitals throughout the world. However, by the 1940s the use of maggots in debridement had largely disappeared.

A rekindled interest in alternative therapies may be changing all that, according to Sherman's team. As this report was being written, the number of US and Canadian clinicians using maggot therapy increased to more than 100, with nearly 1,000 clinicians using maggot therapy worldwide.

The researchers examined the safety, tolerability and effectiveness of outpatient maggot debridement therapy in a group of 21 adult patients, ranging from 35 to 95 years of age. Nearly all the patients suffered from some type of serious leg or foot wound, with eight patients having wounds so resistant to conventional therapies that they were left with few options outside of amputation.

The researchers explain that disinfected larvae of either the Phaenicia sericata or Neobellieria bullata species of maggot were placed into the wound. The colony was then contained with a gauze wrap or cage-like dressing and left in place for between 24 to 72 hours, after which time it -- and the maggots -- were removed.

Maggot therapy completely or significantly debrided the wounds in over 80% of patients, with significant healing occurring within a few weeks after treatment, even though most of these wounds had failed to respond to three or more conventional treatments administered for 6 months or longer.

The majority of patients had few qualms about receiving outpatient maggot therapy, with just eight expressing serious concern. Some worried that the maggots would escape into their homes or in public, and one patient remained so anxious about this that treatment had to be discontinued.

Other patients worried that they might not receive immediate attention for pain or other complications. Pain was treated successfully with oral analgesics, and no patient discontinued treatment due to discomfort or ineffectiveness. However, "two physicians and three patients complained about foul odors during therapy," the investigators report.

Nevertheless, the use of maggots in wound healing is finding increasing acceptance among physicians in the US and elsewhere.

In addition to being safe and effective, outpatient maggot therapy also makes good fiscal sense because it gives the patient round-the-clock healing without the need for expensive hospitalization or surgery.

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation September 2001;82:1226-1229



Dr. Mercola Dr. Mercola's Comments:

My health is quite outstanding and I doubt my system would not heal an external ulcer. However, if my system was impaired, or I had a family member with a non-healing wound, I would definitely implement this therapy.

I am glad that simple, inexpensive approaches for this common problem appear to be more widespread.

For more information on maggot therapy, Dr. Ronald A. Sherman, MD runs the Maggot Therapy Project, at the University of California, which has a great site where you can get lots of excellent information, such as finding doctors practicing maggot therapy and find out about ongoing clinical studies. You can even purchase medicinal maggots from them.

Related Articles:

Maggot Therapy: An Alternative for Wound Infection

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