Scottish Daily Mail

Medieval ‘bloodletti­ng’ could ease gout pain

- By ROGER DOBSON

COULD the medieval cure of bloodletti­ng be a treatment for gout? A review of studies involving nearly 1,000 people suggests the ancient therapy, largely abandoned in modern medical practice, could in fact be nearly 40 per cent more effective at treating the condition than the painkiller­s and antiinflam­matory drugs currently used.

Gout is estimated to affect more than 2 million people in the UK — with cases rising, due to diet and lifestyle changes. But some researcher­s now believe bloodletti­ng may ease symptoms, by lowering inflammati­on and levels of uric acid, a known cause of gout.

Uric acid is produced by the body when it breaks down purines, compounds that occur naturally in the body but are also found in red meat, some seafood and shellfish. High blood levels of uric acid lead urate crystals to form in the joints, causing intense pain and swelling.

Gout, a form of arthritis, typically affects the big toe because it is furthest from the heart — uric acid is more likely to turn into crystals at the extremitie­s where body temperatur­e is coolest.

Gout attacks are usually treated with nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry drugs (NSAID) such as ibuprofen, or with colchicine.

Bloodletti­ng was used for many ailments at the cutting edge of medicine for thousands of years, both literally and metaphoric­ally.

A vein would be cut and blood drained into a cup, with site and quantity left up to the practition­er. Leeches were used for a less severe form of bloodletti­ng.

It was based on the ‘humoral’ theory, in which the human body consisted of four key humours, or liquids — blood, black bile, yellow bile, and phlegm. Imbalances in these, which could be corrected by bloodletti­ng, were believed to be responsibl­e for many illnesses.

By the late 1800s new technologi­es had sidelined bloodletti­ng in Western medicine.

BUT now new research by scientists from Sichuan Integrativ­e Medicine Hospital, China, found bloodletti­ng was 37 per cent more effective in treating gout than medicines such as colchicine and NSAIDs — and patients’ pain was also reduced by 13 per cent.

The controvers­ial review, published in the current edition of Complement­ary Therapies in Clinical Practice examined data from 12 separate studies involving a total of 894 patients.

Blood was taken from the patients using syringes and different types of acupunctur­e needles — with the amount taken varying.

In some trials less than 10ml of blood was taken, in others more. Bloodletti­ng in these trials was also reported to cause 36 per cent fewer side-effects.

Researcher­s found it lowered uric acid levels by the same amount as standard medicine, but was more effective at cutting blood levels of an inflammato­ry compound, C-reactive protein (CRP) — found by previous research to stick to uric acid crystals, triggering the inflammati­on seen in gout.

‘Bloodletti­ng is both effective and safe in treating gout and can especially ease acute severe pain and reduce CRP inflammato­ry levels in patients, with a lower risk of evoking adverse reactions,’ the researcher­s say.

‘Bloodletti­ng was better than Western medicine in ameliorati­ng symptoms of gout.’

However, Professor Philip Conaghan, director of the Leeds University Institute of Rheumatic and Musculoske­letal Medicine, said: ‘This new review summarised previous studies, and many had design flaws.’

Controllin­g uric acid levels effectivel­y is key, he says, adding that current therapies for treating acute gout are ‘highly effective’ in most patients ‘if used appropriat­ely’.

 ?? Picture: ALAMY ??
Picture: ALAMY

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