Monday, June 01, 2009

Bee Venom Used to Treat Arthritis, Multiple Sclerosis

Retired Dentist Uses Bee Venom as Therapy
By Tatiana Pina, The Providence Journal, 5/30/2009

PROVIDENCE — On the second floor of his Tabor Avenue home, Dr. Edward Ziegler Jr. sits at his kitchen table concentrating on a glass jar that seems to be humming.

Lawrence Knowles, 70, a Providence man with a shock of thick white hair, sits next to him with his left arm outstretched, awaiting relief from osteoarthritis, which pains his hands and makes them stiff.

The 91-year-old retired dentist opens the jar slightly and grabs a woman’s metal hair clip off the table. With all deftness of a man half his age he dips the hair clip into jar and plucks out a honey bee.

He presses the bee’s rump to Knowles’ wrist until it digs its stinger into him.

It hurts but Knowles says the venom from the bee helps alleviate his arthritis. Knowles, an adjunct faculty member at Bryant University, says it takes about three treatments before he starts to feel better. He’s been coming to Ziegler for six years. “He wants to beat me at squash,” Ziegler teases.

“The bee sting doesn’t cure a thing,” he declares. “It enhances the activity of the immune system.”

Ziegler has been practicing bee venom therapy for 30 years. He keeps adrenaline in the refrigerator in case someone has an allergic reaction. He invites people suffering from arthritis, multiple sclerosis and other ailments to his kitchen for treatment Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 12 to 1 p.m. It’s free, although he doesn’t mind the kisses from grateful women who have been helped by the treatment.

The Arthritis Foundation puts out a guide on alternative treatments for arthritis that lists bee venom therapy, saying it’s used as an anti-inflammatory for conditions such tendonitis, bursitis, rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. The guide says a study of mice with induced arthritis showed that after eight weeks of bee venom injections the incidence of arthritis was significantly lower than in the control group…

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous4:25 PM

    I was diagnosed with MS 15 years ago. My Dr. doesn't believe in bvt. But this is something My husband and I have been very interested in this treatment since the beginning. We would like to get some information on how and where to buy some bees and get started.
    Thank You
    and may God bless you,

    Ruby

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous4:42 PM

    Hello, I am a 32 yr old wife and mother of two...living with MS since May of 2006. I am interested in bee sting therapy but have the hardest time finding an apitherapist. Please help..I live in the Atlanta Ga.
    404.731.9693

    Sincerely,
    Tiffany

    ReplyDelete