The use of honey as a topical dressing to
treat a large, devitalized wound in a stumptail macaque (Macaca
arctoides)
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Contemp Top Lab Anim Sci. 2005
Jul;44(4):43-5. |
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The use of honey as a topical dressing to
treat a large, devitalized wound in a stumptail macaque (Macaca
arctoides).
Staunton CJ,
Halliday LC,
Garcia KD.
Research Services, Edward Hines VA Hospital, Hines, Illinois
60141, USA.
There are many reasons wounds are managed as open wounds
rather than by primary closure. Indications include gross
contamination, infection, and skin loss leading to
insufficient adjacent tissue for wound closure. The most
common method of managing an open wound is with wet-to-dry
dressings. Wet-to-dry dressings provide mechanical
debridement and promote the movement of viscous exudates
away from the wound. Wet-to-dry bandages ideally are changed
every 12 to 24 h. For nonhuman primates, it is desirable to
develop wound management techniques that limit animal
handling for bandage changes and thus the frequency of
sedation.
Anecdotal reports on the use of honey to treat
wounds date back to 2000 B.C. Recently, scientific inquiries
have found merit to these reports. Honey accelerates healing
because of its direct effects on tissue and antibacterial
properties. In addition, dressings with honey can be changed
relatively infrequently. Honey decreases inflammatory edema,
hastens sloughing of devitalized tissue, attracts
macrophages which cleanse the wound, provides a local
cellular energy source, and protectively covers the wound. A
high osmolarity, acidity, and hydrogen peroxide content
confer honey with antibacterial properties.
Here we describe
the use of honey to manage a bite wound in a stumptail
macaque (Macaca arctoides). The wound healed rapidly: after
2 weeks of treatment, there was markedly less exudate and no
necrotic tissue. This report describes how honey may be
helpful in the management of open wounds in nonhuman
primates by minimizing the need for sedation for bandage
changes.
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