Thursday, May 23, 2024

Honey Heals Chronic Dandruff, Scaly, Itchy Scalp (Seborrheic Dermatitis)




A weekly treatment is good enough although we get nothing on dilution. we need that.

I do think that we also have good results with selenium doctored shampoos.  Making up a shampoo using that and a portion of honey should be good enough to use weekly as a scalp treatment.  good enough anyway to sert aside for such usage.

It is enough to know this and not wait for mass marketing companies to muck around.  augmanting your favorite shampoo choice is simple to do.  so vmake up a batch to handle touchy hair and skin.

I do want to add that honey is good against all biologicals.  that matters because since the invention of the microscope 200 years ago ,we have deluded ourselves into thinking we can see it all.  Yet?  so of course use honey and have nature spot the errant biological.



Honey Heals Chronic Dandruff, Scaly, Itchy Scalp (Seborrheic Dermatitis)


https://greenmedinfo.com/blog/honey-heals-chronic-dandruff-scaly-itchy-scalp-seborrheic-dermatitis


Amazingly, something as simple as crude honey has been found to alleviate an embarrassing scalp condition that most body care products and drugs can't even make a dent in.

Honey's strange power to resolve chronic dandruff and seborrheic dermatitis, while common knowledge within traditional 'folk medicine' systems of healing and countless personal anecdotes, has only recently been 'clinically confirmed' to the point where a peer-reviewed study was published on the phenomenon in the European Journal of Medical Journal, over a decade ago.

Titled, "Therapeutic and prophylactic effects of crude honey on chronic seborrheic dermatitis and dandruff,"[i] researchers investigated the use of crude honey applied topically to thirty patients with chronic seborrheic dermatitis of the scalp, face and front of the chest. Seborrheic dermatitis is a common skin disorder that mainly affects the scalp, usually causing itchy, scaly, red skin and stubborn dandruff, and is often resistant to conventional, chemical-based treatment and a significant source of embarrassment.

In the study, twenty male patients and 10 females, between the ages of 15 and 60 years, presented with scaling, itching and hair loss with lesions described as "scaling macules, papules and dry white plaques with crust and fissures." The patients were instructed to apply diluted crude honey (90% honey diluted in warm water) every other day on the lesions with gentle rubbing for 2-3 minutes. After 3 hours, the honey was gently rinsed with warm water. The patients were monitored for changes in itching, scaling, hair loss and lesions during the treatment period, which lasted 4 weeks. The results of the study were remarkable:

"Itching was relieved and scaling was disappeared within one week. Skin lesions were healed and disappeared completely within 2 weeks. In addition, patients showed subjective improvement in hair loss."

Additionally, those patients who saw improvement in the initial phase of treatment were enrolled in a 'prophylactic phase,' intended to prevent relapse, lasting six months. The results were reported as followed:


"Half patients were treated with the topical honey once weekly and the other half served as control. All the patients responded markedly with application of honey. Itching was relieved and scaling was disappeared within one week. Skin lesions were healed and disappeared completely within 2 weeks. In addition, patients showed subjective improvement in hair loss. None of the patients ( 15 patients) treated with honey application once weekly for six months showed relapse while the 12/15 patients who had no prophylactic treatment with honey experienced a relapse of the lesions 2-4 months after stopping treatment."



The conclusion of the study was that, "crude honey could markedly improve seborrheic dermatitis and associated hair loss and prevent relapse when applied weekly."

So, how does honey work its magic? One explanation is that chronic seborrheic dermatitis and dandruff are caused by the overgrowth of natural skin pathogens, including fungi known as dermatophytes, and honey is an excellent broad spectrum antibacterial and antifungal. It also has significant wound-healing and anti-inflammatory properties, making it ideal for the treatment of inflammatory and pathogen-associated skin conditions. [Read more: 5 Amazing Healing Honey Facts]

We should not be surprised by these remarkable results. Honey has been considered one of nature's most remarkable gifts to mankind since ancient Indian (vedic) civilization. [ii] In ancient Egyptian culture honey was the most popular drug mentioned: 500 times in 900 remedies.[iii] We can assume humankind's appreciation for honey as both a medicine and food stretches back much further, as intimated by 8,000 year old Stone Age paintings.[iv] Presently, the GreenMedInfo.com database contains research on over 50 health benefits associated with honey use. View the research here: Honey Health Benefits.

For additional research on natural interventions for seborrheic dermatitits visit our research page here: Natural Remedies for Seborrheic Dermatitis

[i] N S Al-Waili. Therapeutic and prophylactic effects of crude honey on chronic seborrheic dermatitis and dandruff. Eur J Med Res. 2001 Jul 30 ;6(7):306-8. PMID: 11485891 [ii] Telles S, Puthige R, Visweswaraiah NK. An Ayurvedic basis for using honey to treat herpes. Med Sci Monit 2007; 13: LE17-17. [iii] Al-Jabri AA. Honey, milk and antibiotics. Afr J Biotechnol 2005; 4:1580-1587. [iv] Bansal V, Medhi B, Pandhi P. Honey -A remedy rediscovered and its therapeutic utility. Kathmandu Univ Med J 2005; 3:305-309.

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