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Modern Medicine? Why fix what works....

Armymedic

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Under the title of No Way To Improve Nature:

http://www.cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/08/02/maggot.medicine.ap/index.html

Maggots make medical comeback
Tuesday, August 3, 2004 Posted: 6:49 PM EDT (2249 GMT)


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Think of these wriggly little creatures not as, well, gross, but as miniature surgeons: Maggots are making a medical comeback, cleaning out wounds that just won't heal.

Wound-care clinics around the United States are giving maggots a try on some of their sickest patients after high-tech treatments fail.

It's a therapy quietly championed since the early 1990s by a California physician who's earned the nickname Dr. Maggot. But Dr. Ronald Sherman's maggots are getting more attention since, in January, they became the first live animals to win Food and Drug Administration approval -- as a medical device to clean out wounds.

A medical device? They remove the dead tissue that impedes healing "mechanically," FDA determined. It's called chewing.

But maggots do more than that, says Sherman, who raises the tiny, wormlike fly larvae in a laboratory at the University of California, Irvine. His research shows that in the mere two to three days they live in a wound, maggots also produce substances that kill bacteria and stimulate growth of healthy tissue.

Still, "it takes work to convince people" -- including hospital administrators -- that "maggots do work very well," said Dr. Robert Kirsner, who directs the University of Miami Cedars Wound Center.

"They'll probably be easier to use now that they're FDA-approved, and we'll talk about it more and think about it more," Kirsner said. He estimates he uses maggots in about one in 50 patients where conventional therapy alone isn't enough.

This has been quite a year for wormlike critters. In June, FDA also gave its seal of approval to leeches, those bloodsuckers that help plastic surgeons save severed body parts by removing pooled blood and restoring circulation. And in the spring, University of Iowa researchers reported early evidence that drinking whipworm eggs, which causes a temporary, harmless infection, might soothe inflammatory bowel disease by diverting the overactive immune reaction that causes it.

There's a little more yuck factor with maggots. Most people know of them from TV crime dramas, where infestations of bodies help determine time of death.

Actually, maggots' medicinal qualities have long been known. Civil War surgeons noted that soldiers whose wounds harbored maggots seemed to fare better. In the 1930s, a Johns Hopkins University surgeon's research sparked routine maggot therapy, until antibiotics came along a decade later.

Today, despite precise surgical techniques to cut out dying tissue, artificial skin and other high-tech treatments, hard-to-heal wounds remain a huge problem. Diabetic foot ulcers alone strike about 600,000 people annually and lead to thousands of amputations.

It's not unusual to spend two years and $30,000 treating one, says Dr. David G. Armstrong, a Chicago specialist who first tried maggot therapy in frustration about seven years ago and says he's now used it on several hundred patients.

Drop maggots into the wound and cover with a special mesh to keep them in place. Two to three days later, after the maggots have eaten their fill, lift them off and dispose.

Wound size determines how many maggots, and how many cycles of therapy, are needed. It typically costs a few hundred dollars, says Armstrong, of the Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science.

One of Sherman's studies found 80 percent of maggot-treated wounds had all the dead tissue removed, compared with 48 percent of wounds surgically debrided. Armstrong is about to publish research that suggests maggot-treated patients also spend fewer days on antibiotics.

Patients say it's not that hard to accept. Pamela Mitchell of Akron, Ohio, begged to try maggots when surgeons wanted to amputate her left foot, where infection in an inch deep, 2-inch-wide diabetic ulcer had penetrated the bone. It took 10 cycles of larvae, but she healed completely.

How did they feel? On day 2, when the maggots were fat, "I could feel them moving, because they were ready to come out," she recalls. But, "if you're faced with amputation or the maggots, I think most people would try the maggots."

Wound-care clinics around the country are giving maggots a try on some of their sickest patients after high-tech treatments fail.


 
Leeches are now becoming more in vogue for revascularization of reattached tissue like fingers. More research still has to be done but it is a case of what was old is new again


GF
 
It's quite miraculous what mother nature can do for us.  I think in many circles, the head first plunge into modern technology leaves us negating the powers that we have in our own backyard.  It is up to us to learn them, respect them and use them.  Maybe in the future our race for technical supremacy will slow down and we will be left facing the powers that be, whether in terms of energy, resources and energy.  If I was faced with an expensive surgery with a lengthy recovery process and at best a 50% removal of dead or infected tissues compared with a few cycles of maggotization at an 80% rate of removal, i'd go with the maggots.

 
Patients say it's not that hard to accept. Pamela Mitchell of Akron, Ohio, begged to try maggots when surgeons wanted to amputate her left foot, where infection in an inch deep, 2-inch-wide diabetic ulcer had penetrated the bone. It took 10 cycles of larvae, but she healed completely.

It's this remark that scares me.   For some reason, the medical profession seems unable to think outside of the box when it comes to treatment.   I have a little cousin suffering from a brain tumor, and the only response the medical profession seems to have is to burn it with radiation, cut it out with surgery, or poison it with chemo; rather then admit that alternative therapies may provide the solution, they are anxious to start another round of chemo (up to this date, has had 0 effect).   We've told them "thanks, but no thanks" and are relying on our own devices right now.

Cheers to the maggots, I say....
 
I suppose if one was faced with amputation then I would certainly go for it.  Unfortunately, I hate the ugly buggers and have seen too many animals euthanized due to them getting out of control.  I've flushed more maggots out of wounds than you could shake a stick at and once saw a rabbit with its whole rear end eaten away by them.  Give me surgical debridement any day. 
 
The rabbit might have had a better outcome if it was in a hospital bed and its course of maggots was monitored.
 
Brad, you're absolutely right.   Although, the trick would be to keep the rabbit in the bed.  :)
 
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