Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Maggot Therapy:Boon for Wound Healing


Affiliations
1 Department of Pharmaceutics, SVKM’S NMIMS, School of Pharmacy & Technology Management, Shirpur. Maharashtra, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


The Present Era is of Technological Advancement, particularly in the field of medicines. An example of this statement is MAGGOT THERAPY which particularly cures wound with the help of application of live maggots. The technique is carried out to treat various injuries, ulcers which are non-healing or are very slow to heal. This wound healing technique was first practiced by Maya Indians, but, the breakthrough work on the therapy was done by BAER with his experiments on 100 children. After that, the technique saw a subsequent rise and fall. Due to recent technological advancement the therapy is very much improvised and has advantages over conventional therapy. The main objective of this work is to give deep insight as well as benefits of the therapy along with the current scenario of the therapy. Various research papers as well as publications were referred to put this work and hence after reading the article one can easily understand about various aspects of the technique along with the current situation of the same.

Keywords

Maggot Therapy, Ulcers, Wound Healing.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size


  • Morgan D. Myiasis: the rise and fall of maggot therapy. Journal of Tissue Viability. 1995 Apr 1; 5(2):43-51.
  • World Health Organization (2012) Antimicrobial resistance [online] Available from: www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs194/. [Accessed on 30th July, 2014].
  • World Health Organization (2012) Antimicrobial resistance [online] Available from: www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs194/. [Accessed on 30th August, 2014].
  • Goldstein HI. Maggots in the Treatment of Wound and Bone Infections. JBJS. 1931 Jul 1; 13(3):476-8.
  • Sherman RA, Pechter EA. Maggot therapy: a review of the therapeutic applications of fly larvae in human medicine, especially for treating osteomyelitis. Medical and veterinary entomology. 1988 Jul 1; 2(3):225-30.
  • Robinson W. Progress of maggot therapy: in the United States and Canada in the treatment of suppurative diseases. The American Journal of Surgery. 1935 Jul 1; 29(1):67-71.
  • Baer WS. The treatment of chronic osteomyelitis with the maggot (larva of the blow fly). JBJS. 1931 Jul 1; 13(3):438-75.
  • Horn KL, Cobb AH, Gates GA. Maggot therapy for subacutemastoiditis. Arch Otolaryngol. 1976 Jun 1; 102(6):377-9.
  • Teich S, Myers RA. Maggot therapy for severe skin infections. Southern medical journal. 1986 Sep 1; 79(9):1153-5.
  • Grassberger M, Reiter C. Effect of temperature on development of the forensically important holarctic blow fly Protophormiaterraenovae (Robineau-Desvoidy) (Diptera: Calliphoridae). Forensic Science International. 2002 Aug 28; 128(3):177-82.
  • Çetinkaya M, Ozkan H, Köksal N, Coskun SZ, Hacimustafaoğlu M, Girisgin O. Neonatal myiasis: a case report. Turk J Pediatr. 2008 Nov 1; 50(6):581-4.
  • Nigam Y, Bexfield A, Thomas S, Ratcliffe NA. Maggot therapy: the science and implication for CAM Part I—history and bacterial resistance. Evidence-based complementary and Alternative Medicine. 2006; 3(2):223-7.
  • Sun X, Jiang K, Chen J, Wu L, Lu H, Wang A, Wang J. A systematic review of maggot debridement therapy for chronically infected wounds and ulcers. International journal of infectious diseases. 2014 Aug 1; 25:32-7.
  • Baer WS. Sacro-iliac joint—Arthritis deformans—viable antiseptic in chronic osteomyelitis. ProcInt Assembly Interstate Postgrad Med Assoc North Am. 1929 Oct; 371:365-72.
  • Sherman RA, Wyle F, Vulpe M. Maggot therapy for treating pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury patients. The journal of spinal cord medicine. 1995 Jan 1; 18(2):71-4.
  • Steenvoorde P, Jukema GN. The antimicrobial activity of maggots: in-vivo results. Journal of tissue viability. 2004 Jul 1; 14(3):97-101.
  • Simmons SW. The bactericidal properties of excretions of the maggot of Lucilia sericata. Bulletin of Entomological Research. 1935 Dec; 26(4):559-63.
  • Robinson W. Stimulation of healing in non-healing wounds: by allantoin occurring in maggot secretions and of wide biological distribution. JBJS. 1935 Apr 1; 17(2):267-71.
  • Cazander G, van de Veerdonk MC, Vandenbroucke-Grauls CM, Schreurs MW, Jukema GN. Maggot excretions inhibit biofilm formation on biomaterials. Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research®. 2010 Oct 1; 468(10):2789-96.
  • Gottrup F, Jørgensen B. Maggot debridement: an alternative method for debridement. Eplasty. 2011; 11.
  • Agom DA, Agom JD, Anyigor CN. Using Maggot Therapy in Treatment of Wounds: A Review of Its Effectiveness and Patients’ Experiences.
  • Dumville JC, Worthy G, Soares MO, Bland JM, Cullum N, Dowson C, Iglesias C, McCaughan D, Mitchell JL, Nelson EA, Torgerson DJ. VenUS II: a randomised controlled trial of larval therapy in the management of leg ulcers. Health Technology Assessment. 2009 Nov 1; 13(55).
  • Spilsbury K, Cullum N, Dumville J, O’Meara S, Petherick E, Thompson C. Exploring patient perceptions of larval therapy as a potential treatment for venous leg ulceration. Health Expectations. 2008 Jun 1; 11(2):148-59.
  • McCaughan D, Cullum N, Dumville J, VenUS II Team. Patients' perceptions and experiences of venous leg ulceration and their attitudes to larval therapy: an in‐depth qualitative study. Health expectations. 2015 Aug; 18(4):527-41.
  • Sherman RA. Maggot therapy for treating diabetic foot ulcers unresponsive to conventional therapy. Diabetes care. 2003 Feb 1; 26(2):446-51.
  • Bunkis J, Gherini S, Walton RL. Maggot therapy revisited. Western Journal of Medicine. 1985 Apr; 142(4):554.
  • Morgan D. Myiasis: the rise and fall of maggot therapy. Journal of Tissue Viability. 1995 Apr 1; 5(2):43-51.
  • Sherman RA. A new dressing design for use with maggot therapy. Plastic and reconstructive surgery. 1997 Aug; 100(2):451-6.
  • World Health Organization (2012) Antimicrobial resistance [online] Available from: www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs194/. [Accessed on 30th August, 2014].
  • Sherman RA. Maggot therapy takes us back to the future of wound care: new and improved maggot therapy for the 21st century. Journal of diabetes science and technology. 2009 Mar; 3(2):336-44.
  • Fenn-Smith P. Case study: maggot debridement therapy. Wound Practice & Research: Journal of the Australian Wound Management Association. 2008 Nov; 16(4):169.
  • Roberts S. Doctors enlist (yuck!) in war on wound. Diabetes Forecast. 2000; 53(5):50.
  • Van Veen LJ. Maggot debridement therapy: a case study. Journal of Wound Ostomy & Continence Nursing. 2008 Jul 1; 35(4):432-6.

Abstract Views: 308

PDF Views: 0




  • Maggot Therapy:Boon for Wound Healing

Abstract Views: 308  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Siddharth V. Tholiya
Department of Pharmaceutics, SVKM’S NMIMS, School of Pharmacy & Technology Management, Shirpur. Maharashtra, India
Parag A. Kulkarni
Department of Pharmaceutics, SVKM’S NMIMS, School of Pharmacy & Technology Management, Shirpur. Maharashtra, India

Abstract


The Present Era is of Technological Advancement, particularly in the field of medicines. An example of this statement is MAGGOT THERAPY which particularly cures wound with the help of application of live maggots. The technique is carried out to treat various injuries, ulcers which are non-healing or are very slow to heal. This wound healing technique was first practiced by Maya Indians, but, the breakthrough work on the therapy was done by BAER with his experiments on 100 children. After that, the technique saw a subsequent rise and fall. Due to recent technological advancement the therapy is very much improvised and has advantages over conventional therapy. The main objective of this work is to give deep insight as well as benefits of the therapy along with the current scenario of the therapy. Various research papers as well as publications were referred to put this work and hence after reading the article one can easily understand about various aspects of the technique along with the current situation of the same.

Keywords


Maggot Therapy, Ulcers, Wound Healing.

References