Effects of Three Types of Japanese Honey on Full-Thickness Wound in Mice
Evid Based Complement Alternat Med, 2013;2013:504537
Although many previous studies reported that honey promotes
wound healing, no study has examined the effects of Japanese honey. The aim of
this study was to investigate the effects of three types of Japanese honey,
Acacia, Buckwheat flour, and Chinese milk vetch honey, on wound healing in
comparison with hydrocolloid dressing.
Circular full-thickness skin wounds were produced on male
mice. Japanese honey or hydrocolloid dressing was applied daily to the mice for
14 days. The ratio of wound area for the hydrocolloid dressing group increased
initially in the inflammatory and early proliferative phases and then decreased
rapidly to heal with scarring. However, the ratios of wound area for the
Japanese honey groups decreased in the inflammatory phase, increased in the
proliferative phase, and decreased in the proliferative phase, and some wounds
were not completely covered with new epithelium.
These findings indicate that using Japanese honey alone has
limited benefit, but since it reduces wound size in the inflammatory phase, it
is possible to apply a combined treatment in which Japanese honey is applied
only in the inflammatory phase, followed by hydrocolloid dressing from the
proliferative phase, which would effectively contract the wound.
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