Chicago Sun-Times

Leeches and maggots and your health

- BY DR. ALAN JACKSON BY DR. ALAN JACKSON

“How can old wounds heal while maggots linger so richly?”— Kazuo Ishiguro, “The Buried Giant” ( 2015) “Leeches should be kept a day before applying them. They should be squeezed to make them eject the contents of their stomachs.”— Avicenna ( d. 1037)

Leeches and maggots are often the subject of campy horror and sci- fi movies. For example, “Attack of the Giant Leeches” scared audiences in the 1950s, and for some reason was re- made in 2008. Many classic vampire and monster movies inevitably had squirmy white wormy maggots in a coffin. Yuck!

But these creatures also have a vital part to play in the armamentar­ium of modern medicine.

I first learned about the value of maggots and their use in the care of diabetic wounds at a conference. A primary care physician from Appalachia told me how a patient arrived at the doctor’s office with her foot wrapped in gauze. When the nursing staff removed the gauze, they noted the wound was teaming with maggots! The foot was placed in a bath of warm water, which killed the maggots. However, the wound itself was clean. The maggots had debrided away only the dead, nonviable tissue.

In the early 1930s, Dr. William S. Baer wrote an influentia­l paper describing his experience­s using the larvae ( commonly known as maggots) of the common blow fly in the treatment of osteomyeli­tis. Like many discoverie­s in the history of medicine and surgery, war played a role in finding a new therapy. Baer noted that several soldiers in World War I who had maggot- infested wounds did much better than those who did not. And, until the widespread availabili­ty of antibiotic­s, maggot therapy was used inmany hospitals with great success.

Maggot therapy is still used today by some specially trained wound specialist­s. Dr. Aletha Tippett is an Ohio- based physician who uses sterile maggots to treat diabetic- related and other wounds and ulcers. She applies the maggots to the wound and then covers the area. After a day or two, the maggots are removed and the wound examined. I have seen some of the before and-after maggot therapy photos. Wow!

Leeches also have a long and venerable associatio­n with the history of medicine. Leech therapy was part of the tradition of “bleeding” a patient to restore humoral balance. Some practition­ers used leeches and some used knives. ( In England, physicians were once known as “leeches.”)

Barbers also “bled” people ( the red and white pole that is in the front of many a barbershop represents the drying bloody bandages removed from patients). In fact, the great American patriot, physician and abolitioni­st-Benjamin Rush was noted to be an aggressive practition­er of “bleeding” patients.

Modern contempora­ry medicine has found a use for the slithery creature. The use of leeches in plastic surgery is FDA- approved and is used to control hematomas or postoperat­ive bruising.

Dr. Marco Ellis is a professor and plastic surgeon at Northweste­rn Hospital who occasional­ly uses leeches in certain types of cases. ( Sterile medicinal leeches are acquired from a special lab, not the local bait shop.) He places the leech on the post- surgical area. After a few hours the leech becomes satiated and it is removed and placed in sterile alcohol. The alcohol kills the leech. ( They are not re- usable.) If need be, another leech is applied to the affected area.

Leeches also produce certain enzymes and blood thinners that aid in this valuable healing process.

So while we can rightfully marvel at the spectacula­r discoverie­s of modern medicine, we should also remember that some “low tech” therapies may continue to help us treat diseases as well.

Dr. Alan Jackson is a cardiologi­st and chief medical officer at Roseland Community Hospital and clinical assistant professor of medicine at the University of Illinois Chicago. He also is amember of the SunTimes board of directors.

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