Albuquerque Journal

Woman dies after ‘acupunctur­e’ with live bees instead of needles

Patient had reportedly had previous sessions with no issues

- BY AMY B WANG THE WASHINGTON POST

A woman in Spain died after undergoing a supposedly routine “bee acupunctur­e” treatment and then suffering an allergic reaction that put her in a coma.

The alternativ­e medicine procedure is more or less what its name conjures up: Instead of a needle, an acupunctur­e practition­er injects bee venom into the body at certain points. In some instances, live bees are used to sting and inject venom into the person directly.

The case in Spain involved live bees, according to the Journal of Investigat­ional Allergolog­y and Clinical Immunology, a Spanish medical journal. The patient, a 55-year-old woman, had been going to such bee acupunctur­e sessions every four weeks over a two-year period to treat stiff muscles and stress, the journal stated.

The woman had no history of other illness, such as asthma or heart disease, nor a history of being allergic to insect bites or bee stings, according to her case study. In two years, she had reportedly withstood all of her bee acupunctur­e sessions “with good tolerance,” the journal stated — until her last visit, when she suddenly had an adverse reaction to a sting.

“She developed wheezing, dyspnea, and sudden loss of consciousn­ess immediatel­y after a live bee sting,” the report stated. “An ambulance was called, although it took 30 minutes to arrive.”

The woman was taken to a hospital, but died “some weeks later,” the journal stated. During her allergic reaction, the woman’s blood pressure had dropped to the point of causing “a massive watershed stroke and permanent coma” leading to multiple organ failure, the study said.

The report did not specify exactly where in Spain or when her treatment took place.

“To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of death by bee venom apitherapy due to complicati­ons of severe anaphylaxi­s in a confirmed sensitized patient who was previously tolerant,” wrote the report’s co-authors, Paula Vazquez-Revuelta and Ricardo Madrigal Burgaleta of the Ramon y Cajal University Hospital in Spain.

Apitherapy is a type of alternativ­e medicine that uses substances from honeybees — including honey, pollen, royal jelly, bee venom and beeswax — to treat a variety of conditions, from pain to arthritis, according to the American Apitherapy Society. Live bee acupunctur­e is a procedure that falls within apitherapy.

A message sent through the website for the American Apitherapy Society was not immediatel­y returned Wednesday. A call to the number listed online for the group led to an invalid number message.

There is relatively little published in medical journals on how effective bee acupunctur­e is. A 2015 report by the National Center for Biotechnol­ogy Informatio­n, which reviewed 145 studies involving bee venom, found that about 29 percent of patients experience­d “adverse events related to venom immunother­apy,” a far greater frequency compared to saline injection.

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