Manuka honey could help heal drug-resistant lung infection
Manuka honey could help heal drug-resistant lung infection
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A recent study conducted in London reveal that Manuka honey can help heal drug-resistant lung infection. A fatal lung infection can be treated and one of the current treatments used to treat it can have significantly fewer adverse effects when natural manuka honey is combined with the medication.

Manuka honey is used frequently as a natural treatment for all types of wounds because of its well-known medical benefits. A variety of drug-resistant bacterial infections, like Mycobacterium abscessus, which typically afflict people with cystic fibrosis (CF) or bronchiectasis, can now be killed by it, according to recent research.

The reasearch led by  Victoria Nolan from Aston University in the UK said, "So far, treatment of Mycobacterium abscessus pulmonary infections might be troublesome due to its drug-resistant nature and significant side effects." But he went on to say that the usage of this prospective remedy, which combines amikacin and manuka honey, "has enormous promise as an improved therapy for these dreadful lung infections."

In order to treat the dangerous bacterial lung illness Mycobacterium abscessus, researchers were able to combine manuka honey and the medication amikacin in a lab-based nebulization formulation. The results were published in the journal Microbiology.

Mycobacterium abscessus samples from 16 infected cystic fibrosis (CF) patients served as the study's foundation. They next conducted tests on the antibiotic amikacin and manuka honey to determine the dosage necessary to eradicate the bacteria.

Manuka honey and amikacin were nebulized combined by the research team, and they discovered that they could increase bacterial clearance even at lower doses of amikacin, causing the patient to experience fewer potentially fatal side effects.

Mycobacterium abscessus has been nearly impossible to completely eradicate in cystic fibrosis patients up until recently. Additionally, it might be fatal if the patient needs a lung transplant because they cannot have surgery while the infection is active.

"We have identified a way to potentially kill off these germs with eight times less drug than before," said Jonathan Cox from Aston University in the UK. Amikacin is one of the most important yet toxic medications used to treat Mycobacterium abscessus.

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