7 scary healing methods still apply today

Treating maggots, eating stools, drawing blood from the body, ... are the most frightening and horrifying healing methods in medical history but still apply today.

Today, medicine develops with modern technology to help us take care of our health and healing in the best possible way. But there are still some quite effective ancient healing methods still in use today. Certainly, when you hear about these treatments, you can't get rid of chicken skin because of its horror and horror.

1. Heal with . maggots?

This is the treatment found by Dr. Johns Hopkins in 1982. When taking care of wounded soldiers on the battlefield, medical doctors found wounds with maggots often recover quickly and have mortality rates. much lower. Since then, Dr. Johns Hopkins has been looking for ways to nourish "clean" maggots , that is, maggots that do not carry pathogens before being used for treatment.

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Why do maggots do that?

Maggots secrete digestive enzymes that can dissolve dead or infected tissue, thereby helping the wound to heal faster.

Treatments of maggots have gradually become popular, being applied in many other areas, such as diabetic foot ulcers, postoperative wounds and acute burns, chronic foot ulcers.

When antibiotics appear, this treatment is gradually replaced and rarely used. Recently, scientists around the world are warning about antibiotic resistance , people will be faced with infection, the method will most likely be "re-inflamed".

2. Eat soup . feces

It is hard to imagine this method of healing horror ever existed.

In fact, this cure has appeared in China since the fourth century. At that time, the healers gave the patients a stool to treat severe diarrhea or food poisoning.

According to many documents, in the sixteenth century, doctors also thought of " golden soup " - a soup made from dried manure or fermented manure.

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According to scientists, this remedy may be an ancient version of the current "fecal microbial implant " method (FMT).

Fortunately, modern technology today helps us not to "eat soup" anymore. Instead, the stool will be taken directly into the patient's stomach or small intestine to provide intestinal bacteria, limiting the activity of harmful bacteria and eliminating them.

3. Blood withdrawal

Hemochromatosis - a type of disorder caused by the body absorbing too much iron from the diet. Excess iron is stored in the body's tissues and organs, causing toxicity to the skin, heart, liver, pancreas, and joints.

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Until now, although medicine has developed, blood withdrawal is still considered the only option for this disease.

Doctors use a needle to draw blood from the patient, once or twice a week for several months or longer, to lower the level of ferritin (an iron blood cell protein). However, this method can make patients tired, anemia if too much withdrawal, possible infection.

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The withdrawal of blood from this body is also considered to help restore balance in the body and reduce a range of other diseases.

4. Shock electric cure depression

This is considered the most dangerous and brutal therapy ever known.

Electric shock for depression - ECT - first appeared in 1930. This therapy puts electrical impulses into the brain through electrodes attached to the forehead or directly implanted into the brain. At that time, patients who were not anesthetized and the electric current used were quite strong, causing much pain.

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Currently, this therapy is still used because it is much more effective than other depressive drugs. Fortunately, patients who have been treated with this therapy are currently under general anesthesia, and three times a week for 3-4 weeks.

But this therapy also causes some side effects like memory loss, short-term memory loss, headaches and nausea and sometimes heart problems.

5. Treating joints with venom

From ancient Greece, Hippocrates - the ancestor of Western medicine believed that the use of bee venom. According to him, letting bees burn or inject bee venom into the body can help reduce arthritis and other joint problems.

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Today, this method is often used in Asia, Eastern Europe and South America. In the United States, it is only considered an alternative medical therapy. Many people believe that bee venom treatment can help relieve pain, prevent and relieve inflammation, relieve fatigue and disability in people with multiple sclerosis (an important cause of polio).

Due to bee venom contains melittin , a chemical that is thought to have anti-inflammatory properties.

However, this treatment may cause some risks such as mild skin irritation, painful stings. More serious is the life-threatening anaphylaxis of people who are allergic to bee venom.

The scientific evidence of this method has not been clearly demonstrated.

6. Surgery . lobotomy brain cutting

This surgical method was quite popular in the late 1930s and was still used frequently until about the mid-1950s to reduce the number of overloaded patients in a mental hospital.

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To treat a mental patient, the doctor drills a small hole in the patient's skull, making an incision into the brain lobe, then severing the brain nerve connecting the thought control area to other areas of Brain.

Lobotomy is a controversial surgical treatment method for some forms of mental illness.

Currently, many hospitals apply another version of Lobotomy as Cingulotomy . Doctors will now destroy a small amount of brain tissue thought to be overactive - used to treat people with severe obsessive-compulsive disorder.

7. Trepanning skull drilling surgery

Trepanation is the oldest surgical method, dating from the Stone Age.

In ancient civilizations, the form of drilling skulls is a ritual to get rid of evil spirits - which is thought to cause illness.

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It sounds very scary, but Trepanning still applies today. With modern technology, to solve the hemorrhage caused by internal hemorrhage, head injury or stroke doctors will intervene in the brain, using techniques and tools to drill straight into the patient's skull.

Update 24 May 2019
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