Maggot therapy for the treatment of intractable wounds

被引:104
作者
Mumcuoglu, KY
Ingber, A
Gilead, L
Stessman, J
Friedmann, R
Schulman, H
Bichucher, H
Ioffe-Uspensky, I
Miller, J
Galun, R
Raz, I
机构
[1] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Hadassah Med Sch, Dept Parasitol, IL-91120 Jerusalem, Israel
[2] Hadassah Med Ctr, Dept Dermatol, Hod, Israel
[3] Hadassah Med Ctr, Dept Internal Med, Diabet Unit, Hod, Israel
[4] Hadassah Med Ctr, Dept Rehabil & Geriatr, Hod, Israel
[5] Neve Horim Geriatr Hosp, Jerusalem, Israel
[6] Jerusalem Geriatr Hosp, Jerusalem, Israel
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-4362.1999.00770.x
中图分类号
R75 [皮肤病学与性病学];
学科分类号
100206 [皮肤病与性病学];
摘要
Background Fly maggots have been known for centuries to help debride and heal wounds. Maggot therapy was first introduced in the USA in 1931 and was routinely used there until the mid-1940s in over 300 hospitals. With the advent of antimicrobiols, maggot therapy became rare until the early 1990s, when it was re-introduced in the USA, UK, and Israel. The objective of this study was to assess the, efficacy of maggot therapy for the treatment of intractable, chronic wounds and ulcers in long-term hospitalized patients in Israel. Methods Twenty-five patients, suffering mostly from chronic leg ulcers and pressure sores in the lower sacral area, were treated in an open study using maggots of the green bottle fly Phaenicia sericata. The wounds had been present for 1-90 months before maggot therapy was applied. Thirty-five wounds were located on the foot or calf of the patients, one on the thumb, while the pressure sores were on the lower back. Sterile maggots (50-1000) were administered to the wound two to five times weekly and replaced every 1-2 days. Hospitalized patients were treated in five departments of the Hadassah Hospital, two geriatric hospitals, and one outpatient clinic in Jerusalem. The underlying diseases or the causes of the development of wounds were Venous stasis (12), paraplegia (5), hemiplegia (2), Birger's disease (1), lymphostasis (1), thalassemia (1), polycythemia (1), dementia (1), and basal cell carcinoma (1). Subjects were examined daily or every second day until complete debridement of the wound was noted. Results Complete debridement was achieved in 38 wounds (88.4%); in three wounds (7%), the debridement was significant, in one (2.3%) partial, and one wound (2.3%) remained unchanged. in five patients who were referred for amputation of the leg, the extremities was salvaged after maggot therapy. Conclusions Maggot therapy is a relatively rapid and effective treatment, particularly in large necrotic wounds requiring debridement and resistant to conventional treatment and conservative surgical intervention.
引用
收藏
页码:623 / 627
页数:5
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]
Baer ES, 1931, J BONE JOINT SURG, V13, P438
[2]
BUNKIS J, 1985, WESTERN J MED, V142, P554
[3]
SURGICAL MAGGOTS [J].
CHERNIN, E .
SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1986, 79 (09) :1143-1145
[4]
HORN KL, 1976, ARCH OTOLARYNGOL, V102, P377
[5]
Livingston SK, 1936, J BONE JOINT SURG, V18, P751
[6]
Mckeever DC, 1933, J BONE JOINT SURG, V15, P85
[7]
Mumcuoglu K. Y., 1997, Harefuah, V132, P323
[8]
Maggot therapy for the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers [J].
Mumcuoglu, KY ;
Ingber, A ;
Gilead, L ;
Stessman, J ;
Friedmann, R ;
Schulman, H ;
Bichucher, H ;
Ioffe-Uspensky, I ;
Miller, J ;
Galun, R ;
Raz, I .
DIABETES CARE, 1998, 21 (11) :2030-2031
[9]
MAGGOT THERAPY - THE SURGICAL METAMORPHOSIS [J].
PECHTER, EA ;
SHERMAN, RA .
PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY, 1983, 72 (04) :567-570
[10]
Growth effects of Phaenicia sericata larval extracts on fibroblasts: Mechanism for wound healing by maggot therapy [J].
Prete, PE .
LIFE SCIENCES, 1997, 60 (08) :505-510