'SUGAR TREATMENT HAS MADE ME FEEL SO MUCH BETTER'
A British amputee had an open wound healed with the novel sugar treatment.
Alan Bayliss, from Birmingham, had
his right leg amputated above the knee, and one of his veins removed
after developing a huge ulcer.
However, the resulting wound refused to heal, until a nursing lecturer suggested a sugar treatment used in his native Zimbabwe.
Moses Murandu applied a whole pot of
sugar at first, but was down to five teaspoons two weeks later. He said
it works by drawing water away from the wound, as water is needed for
bacteria to multiply.
Now the electrical engineer is on the road to recovery at the Moseley Hall Hospital, Birmingham.
Mr Bayliss, 62, said: 'It has made me feel so much better and I'm not in pain anymore.
'It's three weeks later and the wound has really come together.'
Mr Murandu is now halfway through his
randomised control trial at three West Midlands hospitals - Moseley
Hall, the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and Manor Hospital in Walsall.
So far 35 patients have successfully received the treatment, with no adverse effects reported.
Mr Murandu, 47, said: 'I'm so pleased with the results and the reaction my treatment is receiving.
"When I was a child my father used to treat my cuts with sugar, so I was to surprised to find that didn't exist here in the UK.'
LONDON: Too much sugar may be harmful for the waistline, but it could help heal wounds faster than antibiotics, says a new research.
The study found that granulated sugar poured directly into bed sores, leg ulcers and even amputation promotes healing when antibiotics and other treatments have failed.
The sugar draws water from the wound into a dressing accelerating the
healing process, which is prescribed in African folk medicine, said
Moses Murandu, senior lecturer in adult nursing at Wolverhampton
University.
He grew up in Zimbabwe where his father used sugar
to heal wounds and reduce pain when he was a child. When Murandu moved
to the Britain, he realised that sugar was not recognised as a
traditional medicine that had something to offer, the Daily Mail
reports.
One of the patients receiving treatment as part of the
research is Alan Bayliss, from Birmingham, who was being treated at
Moseley Hall Hospital's amputee rehabilitation ward.
He
underwent an above-the-knee amputation on his right leg due to an ulcer
at the Queen Elizabeth (QE) Hospital Birmingham in January 2013, and as
part of the surgery a vein was removed from his left leg.
For
his post-surgery rehabilitation, Bayliss was moved to Moseley Hall
Hospital where standard dressings were used but the left leg cavity
wound was not healing effectively.
Nurses contacted Murandu and Bayliss was given the sugar treatment and within two weeks the wound had drastically reduced in size.
Bayliss, a 62-year-old electrical engineer, said: "It has been revolutionary. The actual wound was very deep - it was almost as big as my finger. When Moses first did the dressing he almost used the whole pot of sugar, but two weeks later he only needed to use four or five teaspoons."
Staff Nurse Jonathan Janneman said: "One of the main benefits has been the morale of the patient. He could see the cavity in his leg as well as having been unwell and through operations.
"But the sugar has given something to hold on to. It is amazing that something as simple as sugar has given him a morale boost - the psychological benefit is up there with the physical benefits," Janneman added.
So far 35 patients receiving treatment have seen their condition improve, with no adverse effects reported, compared with 16 patients who did not have the treatment.
Source:IANS
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