From: Jacqueline Paltis [jacpal@earthlink.net]
 Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2006 9:54 AM
 To: Khelly Webb
 Subject: Sugar/Honey Wound Dressings
 Here are two articles In found on the web relating to sugar/honey wound dressings.  The first is about honey, which would probably be easier to do at home.
  http://www.bees-online.com/HoneyAsTreatmentForWoundsAndBurns.htm
  Honey – Natural Treatment for Wounds and Burns
 By Junji Takano
 
 
 Honey is a highly concentrated sugar solution produced by honeybees. It is commonly used as substitute for sugar or a flavor enhancer. But other than that, honey is also effective in treating burns and wounds and it has been used for this purpose for many centuries.
 
 
 Now it is known that the secret of honey lies on its antibacterial activity.
 
 How Can Honey Stop Infection? We know that bacteria love sugar, but why most bacteria and other microorganisms cannot grow or reproduce in honey?
 
 Here are the reasons:
 
 1. Acidity – Honey is acidic, and acids prevent the growth of bacteria.
 
 2. Hydrogen Peroxide – When honey is applied as a wound dressing, it is diluted with fluids from the damaged tissue and combines with an enzyme added by the bee to form hydrogen peroxide, the same antiseptic found in drugstores. Diluted honey can serve as an excellent antiseptic because the naturally occurring hydrogen peroxide won’t harm the tissues and no scarring will occur.
 
 Applying Honey as a Wound Dressing
 
 1. Usually, 20 ml of honey (25 – 30 g, 1 ounce) is enough on a 10 cm X 10 cm (4 inch X 4 inch) dressing. The honey dressings should be cut to a size that extends beyond the edges of the wound.
 
 2. To prevent honey oozing out from the wound dressing, waterproof dressings are needed. Absorbent dressings are not recommended as they soak the honey making it less effective. Adhesive tape or bandages can be used to hold the dressings in place.
 
 3. It is better to spread the honey on the dressing first before applying it on the wound area.
 
 4. If there are abscesses in the wound area, fill it with honey before applying the dressing pad, so that there is honey in contact with the wound.
 
 5. The amount of honey required on the wound depends on the amount of fluid it exudes. Honey will be useless if it is diluted by large amounts of fluid. Also the frequency of dressing changes depends on how fast the honey is being diluted by fluid.
 
 6. On deeper infections, more honey is required to get an effective antibacterial activity.
 
 7. Daily dressing changes up to three times daily may be needed.
 
 8. Exudation of fluid should be reduced after few days use of honey dressing. During this time, less dressing changes will be needed.
 
 Honey Used as Medicine: Below are some common problems which can easily be prevented from the use of honey:
 
 1. Allergies – Raw honey is an excellent treatment for 90% of allergies.
 
 2. Anemia – Honey is a great blood enricher. The darker the honey the better. Take 1 ripe banana with 1 tablespoon of honey, 1-2 times a day.
 
 3. Appetite – Honey improves appetite in children suffering from appetite loss.
 
 4. Conjunctivitis – Dissolve honey in equal amount of warm water. When cooled, apply as lotion or eye bath.
 
 5. Fatigue and exhaustion – Honey is the best ingredient to remove tiredness and fatigue almost instantly because it is easily absorbed in the blood. Dissolve 1 teaspoon of honey in warm water or quarter honey balance of water in a jug and keep in the fridge.
 
 6. Headaches and Migraine – Take 2 teaspoons at meals to prevent headache. For migraines, take 1 dessertspoon of honey dissolved in a half glass of warm water. Repeat in 20 minutes if migraine persists.
 
 7. Heart Diseases – Honey can fight against cholesterol. Pure honey taken with foods daily instead of sugar relieves complains of cholesterol. This is helpful for old people, especially sufferers of diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure and others.
 
 8. High Blood Pressure – Take mixed 1 teaspoon of honey, 1 teaspoon of ginger juice and 1 teaspoon of cumin powder 2 times a day.
 
 9. Insomnia (Sleeplessness) – Take 1 teaspoon of honey mixed in lukewarm water or milk and drink before going to bed.
 
 10. Poor Digestion – Mix 1:1 honey with cider vinegar and dilute with water.
 
 11. Skin – Honey is a good moisturizer. It also helps in reducing skin problems like pimples.
 
 12. Sore Throat – Let 1 teaspoon of honey melt in the back of the mouth and trickle down the throat.
 
 13. Stomachache – Take 1 teaspoon of honey, juice of a 1Ž2 lemon with a hot glass of water first thing in the morning.
 
 14. Teeth – Although honey is sweet, it helps to maintain and protect teeth. Important: Honey contains a certain bacterium that might be harmful in infants; it should never be fed to children younger than one year old. Otherwise it could lead to food poisoning.
 
 Now you know that when honey is applied properly to a wound, it can promote healing just as good as or often better than, over-the-counter ointments and dressings. It is also a great preventive medicine on common ailments.
 
 About The Author: Junji Takano is a Japanese health researcher and has been studying the causes of viruses since 1960s. In 1968, he invented Pyro-Energen, the first electrotherapy device that eradicates viral diseases in a non-narcotic way.
 
 Visit him at: http://www.pyroenergen.com Free newsletter: http://www.pyroenergen.com/newsletter.htm
 
 Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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 http://www.smtl.co.uk/WMPRC/DressingsTimes/vol3.2.txt
 
 
 
 Welcome  to  the  eighth edition  of the Dressings Times in which Dr Keith Middleton of the Pharmacy Department,  Northwick  Park  Hospital  provides an interesting account of the use of sugar paste in wound management.  
 
 Sugar Pastes in Wound Management
 
 In 1976, Herszage and Montenegro of Argentina used  ordinary sugar to treat the wounds of two patients with post-surgical necrotic cellulitis. Further successes followed and in 1980 they  reported  on  the  use  of sugar paste in 120 infected wounds and recorded a cure rate of 99.2%.[1] The time  taken for  the  wounds to heal varied between 9 days and 17 weeks, but it was observed that odour and secretion began to diminish  within  24 hours and disappeared totally after 72 to 96 hours of treatment. In 1985, Trouillet et al[2]  described
 the  use of sugar in the treatment of 19 patients with acute mediastinitis following cardiac surgery. Wounds were  packed every  3  to  4  hours  with ordinary commercially available granular sugar (sucrose). The authors noted  near  complete debridement followed  by the rapid formation of granulation tissue and eradication of bacterial infection after an average of 7.6 days of treatment.
 
 Sugar  was first used as a dressing in Northwick Park Hospi-
 
 tal in 1982 when it was placed into infected radical vulvec-
 
 tomy  wounds  that  had  not  responded to more conventional
 
 therapies. However, due to the nature of such wounds,  pack-
 
 ing  with  granular  sugar  was  found  to be impossible and
 
 therefore a thick paste was developed. Other early  patients
 
 to  be  treated  with sugar at Northwick Park were two hypo-
 
 gammaglobulinaemic individuals who had  developed extensive
 
 tracking sinuses.  For  these,  a thin paste was formulated
 
 that could be injected into the narrow wounds.
 
 
 
 Thick sugar paste has a consistency similar to that of  mod-
 
 elling clay and can be moulded in the gloved hand immediate-
 
 ly prior to packing into cavities with large  openings  such
 
 as pressure sores. Thin sugar paste resembles thin honey; it
 
 is suitable for instillation into cavities with small  open-
 
 ings with a syringe and fine plastic tube or catheter.
 
 
 
 Formulae for sugar pastes
 
 
 
                                     Thin      Thick
 
     Caster sugar                   1200g     1200g
 
     (fine granular sucrose)
 
     Icing sugar – additive free     1800g      1800g
 
     (powdered sucrose)
 
     Polyethylene glycol 400         1416ml     686ml
 
     Hydrogen Peroxide 30%          23.1ml     19ml
 
 
 
 (Final concentration of hydrogen peroxide is 0.15% v/w.)
 
 
 
 The  pastes are prepared in the hospital pharmacy by combin-
 
 ing the H2O2 with the PEG 400 and  then incorporating  this
 
 solution into the sugars with the aid of a mechanical mixer.
 
 When homogenous the paste is packed into screw capped  plas-
 
 tic  containers  and stored at 4C. The pastes are chemically
 
 stable for at least 6 months from preparation.
 
 
 
 Polyethylene glycol (PEG) 400 was chosen  as  the  lubricant
 
 because  it  does  not interact with other components of the
 
 paste and is used in a variety  of pharmaceutical  prepara-
 
 tions.  It  is  a synthetic polymer that is also used in the
 
 cosmetic industry and has significant anti-bacterial proper-
 
 ties.  [3][4]  Polyethylene  glycol 400 can be absorbed from
 
 mucous  membranes   and   high   blood  levels   may    be
 
 nephrotoxic.[5] Although no toxic effects have been noted in
 
 our patients, many of whom are  elderly  and  frail,  sugar
 
 paste should be used with care in patients with impaired re-
 
 nal function as any absorbed polyethylene glycol is excreted
 
 renally.
 
 
 
 Sugar  paste  has  been  used on most wound types but it has
 
 been found to be particularly effective for treating infect-
 
 ed  and  malodorous wounds.  Twice daily application are ad-
 
 vised to provide the optimum antibacterial effect. This  has
 
 been demonstrated  both  in patients with malodorous wounds
 
 (when the smell of infected necrotic tissue is removed after
 
 2-3 days), and in patients with infected abscesses.  Irriga-
 
 tion with thin sugar paste has achieved  successful results
 
 in  patients with chronic discharging sinuses who had previ-
 
 ously failed to respond to other therapies. Repeated  appli-
 
 cation  over  3 to  6  weeks is generally required to bring
 
 about complete healing. Sugar paste lowers the pH of  wounds
 
 to  approximately 5 which may be important in infected wound
 
 although the paste does not stimulate or retard  granulation
 
 tissue formation in clean wounds in the pig model.[6]
 
 
 
 Sugar paste (thick and thin) is rapidly bactericidal against
 
 all organisms so far tested when challenged according  to  a
 
 modified  British  Pharmacopoeia antimicrobial preservatives
 
 effectiveness test. When samples of the paste were  inocu-
 
 lated  with  Staphylococcus  aureus, Streptococcus faecalis,
 
 Escherichia coli or Candida albicans, to give 105  cfu/gram,
 
 less  than  10  cfu/gram were  detectable  after  1 hour at
 
 25C.[7] Pastes diluted with serum have a reduced  bacterici-
 
 dal effect – 75% paste in serum gave an 80% reduction in vi-
 
 able numbers of S. aureus within 2 hours and a 99% reduction
 
 in viable numbers of Proteus mirabilis within 1 hour[3].
 
 
 
 Although  the application of sugar to a wound creates an en-
 
 vironment with low water activity  (aw)  and  high  osmotic
 
 pressure, overall the wound remains moist. (The water activ-
 
 ity of a solution is the ratio of its water vapour  pressure
 
 to  that  of pure water at the same temperature so that aw =
 
 P/Po).
 
 
 
 The effect of reducing water activity values on  the  growth
 
 of  bacteria  has  been investigated by Chirife et al[8] who
 
 determined the limiting water activities at which  different
 
 species of bacteria will grow.  We have determined the water
 
 activity of our pastes, at different dilutions in serum,  by
 
 measuring  water  vapour  pressure at 25C with an electronic
 
 hygrometer. Undiluted pastes have an almost zero availabili-
 
 ty  of  water  because the  sugar (sucrose) is dispersed in
 
 Polyethylene glycol 400 which does not contain water.  Sugar
 
 has an osmotic action which can be thermodynamically related
 
 to water activity by the following equation.[8]
 
 
 
 = (RT/V) x log (1/aw),
 
 
 
 where  = osmotic pressure,
 
 R is the gas constant,
 
 T is the absolute temperature in degrees kelvin,
 
 V is the partial molal volume of water and
 
 aw is the water activity.
 
 
 
 Thus, by determining water activity,  the osmotic  pressure
 
 can be calculated. From this equation it will be seen that a
 
 solution of low water activity has high osmotic pressure.
 
 
 
 Because of the difficulty of conducting a  controlled  trial
 
 of  sugar  paste  in  human wounds, an animal study has been
 
 conducted[6] using a method similar to that reported by Win-
 
 ter and Scales.[9] Full thickness wounds 25 mm square, and 9
 
 mm deep were made in the backs of pigs and around  each  was
 
 placed a colostomy stoma ring. This in turn was covered with
 
 a semipermeable plastic film dressing (Opsite) so as to form
 
 a  moist  chamber.   Wounds were either covered with Opsite
 
 alone, or packed with thick sugar  paste  or  cotton  gauze
 
 soaked  in  various antiseptic solutions and then covered in
 
 Opsite. The results showed that  there  was  no  significant
 
 difference between  wounds  left unpacked, but covered with
 
 Opsite, and those Opsite covered wounds  packed with  sugar
 
 paste, indicating  that although sugar paste did not stimu-
 
 late the formation of granulation  tissue, neither  did  it
 
 cause  inhibition  or  toxicity. However, all wounds packed
 
 with antiseptics showed evidence of delayed  healing,  espe-
 
 cially  those  containing  chlorhexidine gluconate 0.2%. The
 
 pig model wounds were not infected so no conclusions can  be
 
 drawn  on  the  relative value of Opsite and sugar paste for
 
 healing infected wounds.
 
 
 
 Conclusion
 
 
 
 Sugar paste should be considered for the management  of  all
 
 infected  and  malodorous wounds. It is a far less expensive
 
 alternative to Debrisan and similar products  which  are  of
 
 dubious  efficacy  and  are  often  difficult to remove from
 
 wounds. In our experience, sugar paste is also  superior  to
 
 charcoal  dressings for treating malodorous wounds as it re-
 
 moves the cause of the smell and in this respect is  similar
 
 to  metronidazole gel. However sugar paste may be preferable
 
 to metronidazole gel for treating such wounds as the use  of
 
 topical   antibacterials   and   antibiotics   should   be
 
 avoided.[10]
 
 
 
 Sugar paste lacks the toxicity of most  antiseptics and  it
 
 does  not disrupt the architecture of the healing wounds, as
 
 does packing with gauze.
 
 
 
 The paste is self-sterilizing and can be produced in differ-
 
 ent  viscosities  to  suit  all kinds of wound and it is not
 
 painful to apply.  It may cause  bleeding  when  granulation
 
 tissue   is   well  formed,  at  which  stage simple,  non-
 
 impregnated dressings should be applied which will keep  the
 
 wound moist and allow epithelialisation to occur.
 
 
 
 References
 
 
 
 1.  Herszage L. et al., Tratamiento de las heridas supuradas
 
 con azucar granulado comercial, Biol Trab Soc Argent., 1980,
 
 41, 315-330.
 
 
 
 2. Trouillet J.L., et al., Use of granulated sugar in treat-
 
 ment of open mediastinitis after  cardiac surgery,  Lancet,
 
 1985, 2, 180-183.
 
 
 
 3.  Ambrose  U.  An investigation into the mode of action of
 
 Northwick Park Hospital sugar pastes.  Hatfield Polytechnic,
 
 1986, B.Sc. Applied Biology Thesis.
 
 
 
 4.  Chirife  J.,  et al., In-vitro antibacterial activity of
 
 concentrated polyethylene glycol 400 solutions,  Antimicrob.
 
 Ag. Chemother., 1983, 24, 409-412.
 
 
 
 5.  Wilson  C.G. and Thomas N.W. Interaction of tissues with
 
 polyethylene glycol vehicles Pharm. Int., 1984, 5 94-97.
 
 
 
 6. Archer H.G. et al., A controlled  model  of  moist  wound
 
 healing: comparison between semi-permeable film, antiseptics
 
 and sugar paste.  J. exp. Path., 1990, 75, 155-170.
 
 
 
 7. Gordon H., et al., Sugar and wound healing Lancet,  1985, 2, 663-664.
 
 
 
 8.  Chirife  J.,  et al., In-vitro study of bacterial growth
 
 inhibition in concentrated sugar solutions:  microbiological
 
 basis  for the use of sugar in treating infected wounds, An-
 
 timicrob. Ag. Chemother. 1983, 23, 766-773.
 
 
 
 9. Winter G.D. and Scales J.T.  Effect  of  air  drying  and
 
 dressings  on  the  surface  of  a wound Nature, 1963, 197,
 
 91-92.
 
 
 
 10. Morgan D. Formulary of Wound  Management Products  (3rd
 
 edition),  1989,  Clwyd  Health Authority, Preswylfa, Hendy
 
 Road, Mold, Clwyd CH7 1PZ.
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
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