Maggot Therapy
Most people who have received maggot therapy would recommend it to others, despite the odor, pain, itching, and pure yuck factor - Marion Renault
image by: Susantha Sanjeewa Widhanapathirana
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A Truly Revolting Treatment Is Having a Renaissance
In its larval stage, Lucilia sericata looks unassuming enough. Beige and millimeters long, a bottle-fly grub may lack good looks, but it contains a sophisticated set of tools for eating dead and dying human flesh. The maggots ooze digestive enzymes and antimicrobials to dissolve decaying tissue and to kill off any unwanted bacteria or pathogens. Lacking teeth, they use rough patches on their exterior and shudder-inducing mandibles (called “mouth hooks”) to poke at and scratch off dead tissue before slurping it up.
This flesh-eating repertoire is hard enough to stomach in the abstract. Now imagine hosting it on your skin. “Not everyone, psychologically, can deal with that sensation…
Resources
Leeches and Maggots Are FDA-Approved and Still Used in Modern Medicine
The only two living animals approved as medical devices in the U.S. have ebbed and flowed in usage. Some practitioners and patients swear by the results.
A fly can heal the wounds, proves Maggot therapy.
As more and more people become resistant to antibiotics, their chances of survival, if they have chronic wounds, decrease. Surgeons have now gone back to a thousand-year-old technique of healing called maggot therapy or biosurgery, introducing live, germ free maggots into non-healing skin and soft tissue wounds in order to clean out the dead skin, disinfect the wound and stimulate healing.
East Africa wants to be the continent’s maggot protein hub
A farm for maggots? It’s a tough sell for some. But not for Talash Hujibers, who decided to try her hand at insect farming when she saw the smattering of insect-protein companies popping up around Europe while at school there.
How Maggots Heal Wounds
Yes, maggots are creepy, crawly, and slimy. But that slime is a remarkable healing balm, used by battlefield surgeons for centuries to close wounds. Now, researchers say they've figured out how the fly larvae work their magic: They suppress our immune system. Maggots are efficient consumers of dead tissue
Maggot Debridement Therapy as an Alternate Treatment for MRSA Skin Infections
Wound care is challenging in today’s era of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections, but healthcare practitioners treating infectious wounds have some tiny allies. A new study in BMC Biotechnology describes new advances in maggot debridement therapy (MDT), a cost-effective approach in wound management.
Maggot Therapy as Foreign Aid
The medical use of maggot therapy was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2004. Maggot therapy has been used as far back as the ancient world, but it has evolved into a more advanced technique in the present medical community. Now, the United Kingdom is using maggot therapy in war-torn areas like Syria, where there is little access to traditional medical treatments, may save lives.
Maggot Therapy Gains in Popularity
Today, specially prepared maggots, typically of the green bottle fly, are used to "debride" wounds, feeding on sick tissue so healthy cells can move in and further infection is avoided. Maggot therapy was common in the United States in the 1930s but was replaced by antibiotics in the following decade or so. Now, with the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria including MRSA or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, maggot therapy is getting a second look.
Maggot Therapy – Ancient Remedy For Modern Medicine
The treatment of wounds with fly larvae- is increasing rapidly day by day in many countries in the whole world. It is simple, safe and a procedure of high efficacy.
Maggot therapy: A thousand-year-old healing technique
Doctors have found that large numbers of small maggots consume necrotic tissue far more precisely than surgeons can operate, and can remove foreign material and damaged tissue in a day or two
Maggots: A vile prescription
Doctors are trained to remove maggots from patients' wounds, but could it be that maggots are actually there to help?
The Medical Use of Maggots
Fly larvae help scientists understand and treat diseases. An Object Lesson.
A Truly Revolting Treatment Is Having a Renaissance
Most people who have received maggot therapy would recommend it to others, despite the odor, pain, itching, and pure yuck factor.
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