For Dialysis Patients, It Was a Honey of An Idea
But antibiotics are still preferred for preventing catheter infections, study says.
Patients with kidney failure who are undergoing dialysis sometimes develop infections at the site where a catheter enters the body. These infections are most often treated with antibiotics, but recently "medical-grade" honey has emerged as a possible alternative therapy.
A new study finds that applying the honey to catheter-wound sites is no more effective than taking antibiotics for preventing infection in patients who receive dialysis through a tube in the abdomen (called peritoneal dialysis).
Catheter-wound infections can be life threatening and usually are treated with antibiotics. The types of antibiotics suitable for use in such cases, however, work only against a narrow range of infections, and increasingly contribute to germs becoming antibiotic resistant.
Prior research has suggested that medical-grade honey -- created by thorough sterilization of standard honey -- would be effective against a wider range of microorganisms that cause infections and would not contribute to antibiotic resistance.
This new study included 371 peritoneal dialysis patients treated at 26 medical centers in Australia and New Zealand.
The study found no significant difference between those who received a daily application of medical-grade honey at the site of catheter insertion and those who received the antibiotic mupirocin.
The average time to first infection in the honey group was 16 months, compared with about 18 months in the mupirocin group. For patients with diabetes, the average time to first infection was much shorter in those treated with honey (11.6 months) than in those who received the antibiotic, and the risk of infection also was nearly twice as high as those who got the antibiotic.
While the fact that honey doesn't contribute to antibacterial resistance makes it an attractive option for preventing infection at wound sites, our results suggest that honey cannot be routinely recommended for the prevention of infections related to peritoneal dialysis.
At this point in time, honey cannot be recommended over conventional therapy for prevention of peritoneal-dialysis-related infections.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services
- 399 reads
Human Rights
Conscience, Hope, and Action: Keys to Global Peace and Sustainability
Ringing FOWPAL’s Peace Bell for the World:Nobel Peace Prize Laureates’ Visions and Actions
Protecting the World’s Cultural Diversity for a Sustainable Future
The Peace Bell Resonates at the 27th Eurasian Economic Summit
Puppet Show I International Friendship Day 2020