Edmonton Journal

Bee venom eases sting of aging

Product prompts body to make tissue

- KAREN GRAM Read more about this product at vancouvers­un.com or wedderspoo­n.ca.

There is nothing like a closeup mirror to cause a gal in her prime to feel the sting of aging. One glance dispels any fantasy that she looks as young as she feels. Ouch.

Now, the sting of a bee can take the bite out of that unwelcome reality.

A new beauty product just being launched commercial­ly in North America uses bee venom as an alternativ­e to Botox. The Vancouver Island business launching the product says bee venom can work wonders on those age-defining lines.

But unlike Botox, bee venom cream doesn’t paralyze facial muscles.

“It fools the skin into thinking it has been stung, and it releases certain chemicals that tighten the area to combat the sting,” explains Catherine Martin, co-owner of Wedderspoo­n Organics, a Duncanbase­d organic manuka honey business.

In particular, bee venom stimulates the production of collagen and elastin, she says.

“Gwyneth Paltrow and other movie stars (who import it from England for personal use) say they swear by it,” she says, adding it’s very popular in the U.K. and is a craze among China’s new middle class.

Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, has been applying it to her face for about five years. People say she looks good these days, and while marital bliss could be behind it, she claims it’s bee venom that is beating back years of smoking and horse riding. Duchess Catherine is said to be using it, too, although it’s hard to imagine she needs it yet.

Wedderspoo­n’s Martin hails from England and on visits saw this product take the nation by storm. She and her husband Sebastien Martin decided to add the product to their line of manuka honey products.

“We thought the cream itself, the idea and the science behind it, was interestin­g, and we wanted to develop a more organic — more of a natural emphasis — with our cream because that is what Wedderspoo­n is all about,” she says. “So we have developed our own formulatio­n, and we are really pleased with it.”

Besides the venom, the cream contains organic active manuka honey and wax, apricot, cocoa and avocado oils and lots of other organic stuff. It doesn’t contain sodium lauryl sulfates, petroleum, mineral oil or parabens.

When applied to the face, the cream feels nourishing

“It fools the skin into thinking it has been stung, and it releases certain chemicals that tighten the area to combat the sting,”

CATHERINE MARTIN

and the venom provokes a slight tingling sensation followed by a tightening. It can be used as a mask or a day or night cream.

Vancouver allergist Ross Chang says there is logic to the product.

“It probably works,” he says, adding that he hasn’t had any experience with it yet. “What the body is trying to do is heal itself against this poison. As a consequenc­e it starts making new tissues.”

The trick for the manufactur­ers, Chang says, is to use enough venom to stimulate the process but not so much that it would cause redness and swelling. A small sampling in the newsroom caused no redness or swelling.

Beekeepers have always known about the magical properties of bee stings.

Apparently, being stung a zillion times combats arthritis. Some alternativ­e therapists put bees right on a person’s arthritic joint and trap a bee under a glass until it stings the joint. Some pianists consume bee venom to counter the arthritis in their hands. Wedderspoo­n does a swift business with their bee venom honey.

An Internet search reveals that honeybee venom contains at least 18 active substances.

These include the peptides melittin and apamin. Melittin causes localized pain and inflammati­on but also has a moderate antibacter­ial and antifungal effect.

More importantl­y, it is an anti-inflammato­ry that is being used to treat inflammato­ry diseases such as rheumatism and osteoarthr­itis.

People with bee allergies are urged not to use this product. Chang warns even non-allergic people can become sensitive to toxins such as bee venom over time so that one day, even after years of use, they have a severe reaction. This also happens with hair dye.

“The risk is if you sensitize them to an insect sting, any time you get stung with the insect you could have an anaphylact­ic reaction and have to go to the emergency room. We have seen that with arthritis therapy.”

Some people say they notice a positive change in their skin after five to seven days using bee venom. Others say it takes weeks or months to make a difference.

Martin says the venom has a cumulative effect. Each time it is applied, more collagen and elastin are produced.No injections, no paralysis — and no bees harmed.

To harvest the venom, beekeepers put a glass lid over their hives, preventing the bees from leaving. Frustrated, the bees sting the glass. Releasing its stinger normally kills a honeybee, but the stinger can’t penetrate the glass and remains in the bee. The venom collects on the glass.

“It is so expensive,” says Martin. “The going rate for the venom is $250 per gram.” One sting contains about 50 micrograms.

Plans are for Queen of The Hive by Wedderspoo­n to retail in health food stores for $77.99, but you can get it online for $72.99 for 50 mL (wedderspoo­n.ca).

 ?? IAN LINDSAY, POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Queen of the Hive, made by Vancouver Island-based Wedderspoo­n Organics, contains such natural products as bee venom and manuka honey.
IAN LINDSAY, POSTMEDIA NEWS Queen of the Hive, made by Vancouver Island-based Wedderspoo­n Organics, contains such natural products as bee venom and manuka honey.
 ?? DON HEALY, POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, has been applying bee venom to her face for about five years.
DON HEALY, POSTMEDIA NEWS Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, has been applying bee venom to her face for about five years.
 ??  ?? EDMONTON JOURNAL
EDMONTON JOURNAL

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