A double blind clinical trial on the efficacy of honey drop
in vernal keratoconjunctivitis
Evid Based Complement Alternat Med, 2014;2014:287540
Purpose. This trial was designed to evaluate the efficacy
and safety of topical honey eye drops in patients with diagnosed VKC.
Methods. This clinical trial was conducted on 60 patients
with diagnosed VKC. The patients were selected and randomly allocated between
two groups of 30. Patients in two groups received honey eye drop (60% in
artificial tear) or placebo, other than cromolyn and fluorometholone 1% eye
drops, to be used topically in each eye, four times per day. The patients were
examined with slit lamp and torch at baseline and the follow-up visits on the
1st, 3rd, and 6th months of the study for redness, limbal papillae, and
intraocular pressure.
Results. Out of 60 patients who completed the study, 19 patients
(31.7%) were female. There was significant increase in eye pressure and
reduction in redness as well as limbal papillae, following the consumption of
the honey drop in honey group compared to placebo control group (P < 0.05).
At the end of trial, one patient in honey group and 7 ones in placebo group had
limbal papillae (P < 0.05).
Conclusion. Topical honey eye drops, when used along with
Cromolyn and Fluorometholone eye drops, might be beneficial for the treatment
of VKC.
1 comment:
Raw honey smeared on an eyelid that is infected with a stye will also clear the eye stye up and it wont ever come back. This worked for my mum as a child after she had recurring styes and then when we (her children) got them she applied the same treatment.
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