A HARD PILL FOR SCIENCE TO SWAL­LOW

Homeopa­thy is grow­ing in pop­u­lar­ity, but is there any­thing in its di­luted reme­dies?

Los Angeles Times - - Health & Wellness - jdear­dorff@tri­bune.com

BY JULIEDEAR­DORFF A pop­u­lar home­o­pathic flu rem­edy boasts that it has no side ef­fects, causes no dan­ger­ous drug in­ter­ac­tions and won’t make you drowsy. But the prod­uct also lacks some­thing most peo­ple ex­pect to find in their medicine: ac­tive in­gre­di­ents. ¶ Os­cil­lo­coc­cinum (O-sill-ocox-see-num), a tongue-twist­ing con­coc­tion used to treat flu-like symp­toms, is a sta­ple in many Euro­pean homes. Sales are steadily grow­ing in the U.S., where it can be found at store­front phar­ma­cies and ma­jor re­tail­ers. ¶ Homeopa­thy crit­ics, how­ever, de­ri­sively call the prod­uct “oh-silly-no-see-um,” a nick­named in­spired by its ab­sence of bi­o­log­i­cally ac­tive com­pounds. Such prod­ucts have placed homeopa­thy in an awk­ward po­si­tion: pop­u­lar among holis­tic-minded con­sumers but scorned by sci­en­tists and most West­ern-trained doc­tors. ¶ The Bri­tish Med­i­cal Assn. ve­he­mently ob­jects to gov­ern­ment fund­ing for home­o­pathic treat­ments, con­sid­er­ing any ef­fect to be placebo.

Around the world, ac­tivists have staged mass pub­lic “over­dose” events out­side phar­ma­cies to demon­strate there’s lit­er­ally noth­ing in­side the small white pills. One U.S. grouphas of­fered $1 mil­lion to any­one who can prove homeopa­thy works and has chal­lenged ma­jor drug re­tail­ers to stop sell­ing the prod­ucts.

“No­body, not even home­opaths, have an idea how the reme­dies work,” says Dr. Edzard Ernst, a long­time critic of homeopa­thy and pro­fes­sor of com­ple­men­tary medicine at the Univer­sity of Ex­eter’s Penin­sula Med­i­cal School in Bri­tain.

Few things rile sci­en­tific skep­tics more than homeopa­thy, a baf­fling form of al­ter­na­tive medicine in which pa­tients are given highly di­luted and vig­or­ously shaken prepa­ra­tions. Though it has been used for cen­turies and some stud­ies have re­ported pos­i­tive find­ings, the prac­tice has no known sci­en­tific ba­sis. Most analy­ses have con­cluded there’s no ev­i­dence it works any bet­ter than tak­ing a sugar pill.

Yet homeopa­thy hasn’t just sur­vived the years of scathing crit­i­cism, it’s pros­per­ing. In the U.S., sales of home­o­pathic treat­ments reached $870 mil­lion in 2009, grow­ing 10% over the pre­vi­ous year, ac­cord­ing to es­ti­mates from the Nu­tri­tion Busi­ness Jour­nal.

For Os­cil­lo­coc­cinum, sold in 60 coun­tries, es­ti­mated an­nual re­tail sales in the U.S. are more than $20 mil­lion, ac­cord­ing to the man­u­fac­turer, Bo­iron of Lyons, France. Other home­o­pathic prod­ucts in­clude ar­nica gel for bruises and strains and di­luted zinc reme­dies for colds.

“Some peo­ple feel these prod­ucts shouldn’t work due to the di­lu­tion level,” says phar­ma­cist Christophe Merville, di­rec­tor of ed­u­ca­tion and phar­macy de­vel­op­ment for Bo­iron, the world’s lead­ing maker of home­o­pathic medicines. But he says ba­sic science stud­ies have shown “that highly di­luted so­lu­tions have bi­o­log­i­cal prop­er­ties that are dif­fer­ent than wa­ter.”

Ernst said that even if the so­lu­tion is struc­turally dif­fer­ent, it doesn’t mat­ter: “Af­ter do­ing my wash­ing up, the wa­ter in my sink is very dif­fer­ent from pure wa­ter, yet it would be silly to claim it had ther­a­peu­tic ef­fects.”

Homeopa­thy is so po­lar­iz­ing in part be­cause it’s based on prin­ci­ples that defy the laws of chem­istry and physics. One pil­lar is the as­sump­tion that “like cures like.” Chop­ping a red onion, for ex­am­ple, can make your eyes tear and nose run. Sea­sonal rhini­tis can trig­ger the same symp­toms, so a home­o­pathic treat­ment de­rived from a red onion, Al­lium cepa, may be a rem­edy.

The sec­ond as­sump­tion pro­poses that di­lut­ing and vi­o­lently shak­ing (or “suc­cussing”) the reme­dies makes them more ef­fec­tive, even if — and this is the part most sci­en­tists find hard to swal­low — the fi­nal prepa­ra­tion no longer con­tains a sin­gle mol­e­cule of the orig­i­nal in­gre­di­ent. The fi­nal prod­uct usu­ally is a tiny ball of sugar the pa­tient swal­lows, though home­o­pathic prod­ucts also are sold as gels.

The mech­a­nism be­hind the di­lut­ing and shak­ing re­mains a mys­tery. Some say home­o­pathic medicine may stim­u­late the body’s nat­u­ral de­fenses; oth­ers sug­gest home­o­pathic medicine re­tains a “mem­ory” of the orig­i­nal sub­stance in the wa­ter and the ef­fect is due to nanopar­ti­cles.

Re­gard­less, pro­po­nents say it shouldn’t be dis­counted sim­ply be­cause it can’t be ex­plained. For years, no one knew how as­pirin worked. And sci­en­tists still don’t fully un­der­stand the mech­a­nism be­hind some con­ven­tional drugs, such as Ri­talin, ar­gues Dr. Ti­mothy Fior, di­rec­tor of the Cen­ter for In­te­gral Health in Lom­bard, Ill.

“Homeopa­thy chal­lenges the be­lief in the molec­u­lar par­a­digm of medicines,” says Fior, who re­cently gave an in­tro­duc­tory lec­ture on homeopa­thy to med­i­cal stu­dents at the Univer­sity of Illi­nois at Chicago. “Home­o­pathic medicines are so di­lute that they work more ac­cord­ing to a bio­phys­i­cal or en­er­getic par­a­digm.”

Peo­ple of­ten use homeopa­thy to treat chronic pain, di­ges­tive is­sues, colds, in­fluenza and al­ler­gies when they’re not get­ting re­lief from con­ven­tional medicine or are look­ing for a cheaper al­ter­na­tive. Home­o­pathic prac­ti­tion­ers tend to spend more time with pa­tients than reg­u­lar doc­tors, though an ap­point­ment isn’t nec­es­sary to ob­tain med­i­ca­tion. The prod­ucts also ap­peal to those look­ing for a “nat­u­ral” or holis­tic prod­uct or who can’t tol­er­ate the side ef­fects of con­ven­tional drugs.

Mona Grayson, a raw food chef and hap­pi­ness coach in the Chicago sub­urb of War­renville, turned to homeopa­thy for chronic di­ges­tive is­sues af­ter her in­surance ex­pired and she could no longer cover the $500-a-week cost of her con­ven­tional treat­ment. Af­ter a two-hour con­sul­ta­tion with Fior, Grayson was given a rem­edy of phos­pho­rus and says she hasn’t had prob­lems since.

Crit­ics say there’s a risk in per­pet­u­at­ing the no­tion that homeopa­thy is equiv­a­lent to mod­ern medicine, in part be­cause peo­ple may forgo or de­lay con­ven­tional treat­ment. More­over, it’s un­eth­i­cal for phar­ma­cists to pre­scribe place­bos, says W. Steven Pray, a pro­fes­sor of phar­macy at South­west­ern Ok­la­homa State Univer­sity.

And there’s scant ev­i­dence that homeopa­thy pro­vides any­thing be­yond a placebo ef­fect. Many homeopa­thy stud­ies are small, of poor qual­ity and funded by home­o­pathic man­u­fac­tur­ers.

Dr. Iris Bell of the Univer­sity of Ari­zona Col­lege of Medicine, one of the few homeopa­thy re­searchers to get fed­eral fund­ing, says the high­est-qual­ity tri­als — dou­ble-blind, ran­dom­ized, placebo-con­trolled stud­ies — have had both neg­a­tive and pos­i­tive re­sults. Her own work on fi­bromyal­gia has shown in­di­vid­u­al­ized homeopa­thy did work bet­ter than the placebo.

Re­searchers also have shown that arthri­tis pa­tients ben­e­fited sig­nif­i­cantly when they re­ceived homeopa­thy in con­junc­tion with con­ven­tional treat­ment over six months. But the study, pub­lished in the jour­nal Rheuma­tol­ogy, found the im­prove­ment was due to homeopa­thy’s con­sul­ta­tion process rather than its reme­dies.

“It has been a big prob­lem bring­ing science to homeopa­thy,” says Dr. Josephine Briggs, di­rec­tor of the Na­tional Cen­ter for Com­ple­men­tary and Al­ter­na­tive Medicine, part of the Na­tional In­sti­tutes of Health.

That doesn’t trou­ble those who say they are helped by the treat­ments.

“We don’t al­ways know why things work, but some­times they do,” says Dr. Roland Tol­liver, a po­di­a­trist in Freeport, Ill., who uses it with his chil­dren and oc­ca­sion­ally rec­om­mends ar­nica for pa­tients with mus­cu­loskele­tal is­sues.“The most im­por­tant thing is to leave all op­tions open.”

Photo il­lus­tra­tion by Ri­cardo DeAratanha Los An­ge­les Times

Wil­liam DeShazer Chicago Tri­bune

CON­SUL­TA­TION: Dr. Ti­mothy Fior, a home­o­pathic prac­ti­tioner, checks up on pa­tient Mona Grayson at the Cen­ter for In­te­gral Health in Lom­bard, Ill.

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