Maden
tegen hardnekkige wonden.*
In Amerika zijn maden nu ook goed gekeurd als
medische toepassing. Maden doen wonden aan benen en voeten snel en effectief
genezen zonder dat verdoving nodig is. Zij doen dat door dood en geïnfecteerd
wondvlees te eten daarbij
desinfecteren zij de wond en bevorderen de groei van nieuw weefsel. De gebruikte
maden zijn de larven van de aasvlieg.
Maggots Make Move to Mainstream Medicine
Experts say critters help doctors heal
stubborn leg, foot wounds faster.
- First came the
leeches, moving from the land of medical lore to modern doctors' offices. Now
another creepy crawler -- the lowly maggot -- is poised to become the next big
thing in animal-assisted care.
Since federal
officials approved the use of "medical maggots" last year, orders for
the critters have skyrocketed as doctors use them as alternative treatments for
patients with stubborn, slow-healing leg and foot wounds. While they have a
reputation as dirty and disgusting creatures, maggots actually can make quick
work of cleaning a wound, said Dr. Barry Handler, a plastic surgeon who has used
them on several patients in the San Diego area. "I've used them in some
pretty difficult situations," he said, although he admits that many
patients -- not to mention nurses -- don't want to go near the little larvae.
While they're
getting newfound attention in the modern medical world, maggots are hardly a
recent addition to the toolboxes of doctors. In the Civil War and other
conflicts, military physicians realized that wounds infested by maggots often
ended up being cleaner and less infected than others. Doctors commonly used
maggots to treat wounds as recently as the 1930s and 1940s.
Maggots play a
vital role in decomposition. They're the larvae of blowflies, which swoop in to
bodies from miles away when they detect the smell of death. The blowflies lay
eggs, which develop into maggots. Then the maggots eat the dead flesh before
forming pupae, a kind of cocoon, and emerging as blowflies.
In living people,
maggots clean wounds by eating dead and infected tissue. In addition, they
disinfect the wounds and stimulate the growth of healthy tissue, said Dr. Ronald
Sherman, an assistant professor of medicine and pathology at the University of
California, Irvine. "There is no single other product on the market that
can do all those actions simultaneously."
Sherman began popularizing the
use of medical maggots about 20 years ago after studying them. approval of them
last year, but the decision makes it easier for doctors to get reimbursement
from insurance companies.
Sherman, who grows maggots, is now selling enough of them
each week to treat 30 to 40 patients. In Europe, where maggot therapy is more
popular, an estimated 30,000 treatments occur each year, and Sherman thinks the
number will grow.
A typical treatment may require hundreds of maggots, which
grow larger as they "eat" dead tissue in a wound. At Sherman's
non-profit maggot nursery, 250 to 500 larvae cost about $70.
Doctors or nurses place dozens of the baby maggots in a
single wound -- they're tiny before they start gorging on dead flesh -- and then
cover them with a dressing to keep them from wandering off. Typically, the
maggots stay in place for a couple days, becoming larger as they chow down, and
are then removed and killed. Otherwise, they would try to form pupae.
There are other treatments for slow-healing wounds, including
debridement, the cleaning of dead tissue by a doctor or nurse. But debridement
can be very painful, and patients may lose healthy tissue in the process,
Handler said. In another potential hitch, patients may need to undergo several
rounds of debridement. If anesthesia is necessary, patients will have to fast
for several hours beforehand. If several procedures are required, the lack of
nutrition can spell trouble in ill patients, he said.
With maggots, "you don't need any anesthetic, you don't
need the risk of the anesthetic, and you don't need to take their food
away," he said.
While maggots can speed healing at a low cost, selling
patients on the therapy isn't easy. After all, maggots are quite rightly
associated with death and decomposition.
"It still takes a certain patient to accept these. I've
had just as many people turn me down as accept it," Handler said. "And
then there's always the issue of the nursing staff whenever you're talking about
maggots and leeches. Thirty percent of the staff is gung-ho and excited, 30
percent could care less but are good sports, and 30 percent really don't want to
have anything to do with it."
Even so, maggot therapy may have a bright future. According
to Handler, they're cheap, they don't become ineffective over time like some
antibiotics, and they work. "Especially
as doctors are getting stretched thinner and thinner," he said, "it
will be helpful for them to conserve their resources and use maggots." (Maart
2005)