
Honey as a Wound Dressing — The Oldest Antimicrobial Medicine Known to Humanity
Honey has been used to treat wounds for at least four thousand years and likely far longer — the Edwin Smith Papyrus (c. 1600 BCE, copied from texts a thousand years older) prescribes honey for wound treatment, and the Sumerians documented honey-based wound salves before that. Honey's antimicrobial power comes from multiple mechanisms working together: the enzyme glucose oxidase (added by bees during honey production) slowly generates hydrogen peroxide when honey is diluted by wound moisture, providing a sustained antiseptic effect without damaging tissue; the extremely low water activity (around 0.6) draws moisture out of bacterial cells by osmosis, dehydrating and killing them; the acidic pH of 3.2–4.5 inhibits most pathogenic bacteria; and the high sugar concentration creates an environment where bacteria cannot reproduce. These properties make honey effective against a broad range of wound pathogens including Staphylococcus aureus and even antibiotic-resistant MRSA strains. Raw, unprocessed honey retains all of these properties. Pasteurised commercial honey has reduced or absent glucose oxidase activity and is significantly less effective. Today, medical-grade honey (Medihoney) is used in hospitals worldwide — validating what prehistoric healers discovered through observation thousands of years ago.
Istruzioni
Understand why honey works as medicine
Understand why honey works as medicine
Select the right honey
Select the right honey
Materiali per questo passaggio:
Honey50 gClean the wound before applying honey
Clean the wound before applying honey
Materiali per questo passaggio:
Clean Water250 mlStrumenti necessari:
Clean Cotton ClothApply honey directly to the wound
Apply honey directly to the wound
Cover the honey dressing with a bandage
Cover the honey dressing with a bandage
Strumenti necessari:
Absorbent ClothChange the dressing daily
Change the dressing daily
Treat minor burns with honey
Treat minor burns with honey
Materiali per questo passaggio:
Clean Water500 mlUse honey internally for sore throat and coughs
Use honey internally for sore throat and coughs
Store honey for long-term use
Store honey for long-term use
Strumenti necessari:
Ceramic Storage Jar with LidUnderstand the limits of honey wound care
Understand the limits of honey wound care
Materiali
2- 50 gSegnaposto
- 750 mlSegnaposto
Strumenti richiesti
3- Segnaposto
- Segnaposto
- Segnaposto
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