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MS pain and Bee stings (!?)



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  #1  
Old Jul 21, 2005, 03:14 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2005
MS pain and Bee stings (!?)

Anyone got any experience of beesting therapy for MS pain?

One of my oatients uses this, and I'm wondering what the basis may be (is there any research etc)

Terry

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  #2  
Old Jul 21, 2005, 03:14 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2005

Originally Posted by terrytz
Anyone got any experience of beesting therapy for MS pain?

One of my oatients uses this, and I'm wondering what the basis may be (is there any research etc)

Terry

Or one of my PATIENTS even, I must learn to proof read!

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  #3  
Old Jul 27, 2005, 06:14 AM
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Join Date: May 1999

http://health.discovery.com/centers/...sclerosis.html

Bee venom therapy (BVT), or apitherapy, uses the stings of live bees to relieve symptoms of MS such as pain, loss of coordination, and muscle weakness. Stinging is not limited to any specific area of the body, as stings in different places seem to produce different results. Apitherapy researchers suggest that certain compounds in bee venom, namely melittin and adolapin, help reduce inflammation and pain, and that the combination of all the "ingredients" in bee venom somehow helps the body to release natural healing compounds in its own defense.

Given the fact that no major studies on BVT have been done so far, it is estimated that only about 50 U.S. physicians use it to treat MS or other diseases. And the evidence that BVT helps MS patients, although encouraging, remains anecdotal. Despite this, of the more than 250,000 cases of multiple sclerosis nationwide, thousands of patients are said to use bee venom as an alternative approach to the interferon, corticosteroids, and other drugs typically used. Word on BVT has spread to where the American Apitherapy Society says there are about 10,000 people providing this therapy — apitherapists, beekeepers, and acupuncturists, as well as those with no health background. Some patients even treat themselves. But the lack of medical training among most practitioners and the risk of dangerous allergic reactions to the treatment have raised concerns about BVT among the medical establishment.

Nonetheless, bee venom therapy has generated enough "buzz" that Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., has begun a one-year preliminary study, funded by the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America, to research apitherapy as a potential treatment. In the end, researchers hope to settle the debate whether bee venom should be considered a serious treatment for MS.

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  #4  
Old Aug 26, 2005, 01:54 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2005

I have been told there is actually a bit of research on this being done in S. Korea.


Unfortunately, I do not read Korean.

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