There was an Indian prime minister who advocated "Urine Therapy" (of
course one's own urine) called PISKY for various diseases and he
claimed that he was practicing that every morning; The problem was he
lived for long years. He even managed to organise an International
meeting on that that topic with participants from various parts of the
world, though it is not popular with the population now.
Regards
Vivek
Guy's & St.Thomas
On Tue, 21 Dec 2004 15:53:22 -0000 "Corns, Cathryn"
<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Isn't there an old remedy to wash hands in one's own fresh urine and
> this
> will heal chapping (and possibly chilblains)!
>
> Cathryn Corns
> Head of Biochemistry & Clinical Director
> Southend Hospital NHS Trust
> 01702 435555 ext 4058
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Clinical biochemistry discussion list
> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Simpson, Elliott
> (MK) Top Grade Biochemist Laboratory Directorate
> Sent: 21 December 2004 11:48
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: A Case for Christmas
>
> I have just been phoned by a consultant dermatologist about the
> following
> case. It seems to me to have been designed for discussion during
> Christmas
> week, so I share it with the site hoping, as ever, to find a helpful
> response.
>
> The patient had a venous leg ulcer and venous dermatitis which was
> responding to conventional therapy (compression bandaging and topical
> steroids). In August, while on holiday in Cornwall, a nurse switch to a
> "medicated bandage" and the lady had an allergic reaction which made the
> dermatitis worse. On her returning home, she stopped her conventional
> therapy and, for reasons not totally clear to our medical staff, applied
> a
> bandage soaked in her dog's urine onto the ulcer for two days on two
> occasions. She noticed an immediate improvement and the ulcer is now
> healed
> and there is no dermatitis.
>
> The dermatologists would have expected the healing process to have
> stopped
> when the conventional treatment was stopped. They also would have
> expected
> the healing to have taken longer than this had conventional treatment
> not
> been stopped.
>
> The dog is said to be very old and was not on any medication. (We don't
> know much about the dog - breed, etc - but probably could find out, if
> that
> was thought to be useful.)
>
> The Dermatologist is interested to know if there any known healing
> compounds
> likely to be present and a specimen of the dog's urine is available for
> any
> colleagues who would like to try to find some.
>
> Wishing you all a Very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
>
> Elliott Simpson
> Deputy Clinical Director
> Clinical Support Services Directorate
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ************************************************************************
> ***********************************************************************
>
>
> NHS Lanarkshire Confidentiality and Disclaimer Notice
> ******************************************
> This email is intended only for the addressee named above and the
> contents should not be disclosed to any other person or copies taken.
> Any views or opinions presented are solely those of the sender and do
> not necessarily represent those of NHS Lanarkshire (NHSL) unless
> otherwise specifically stated.
> As Internet communications are not secure NHSL do not accept legal
> responsibility for the contents of this message or responsibility for
> any change made to this message after the original sender sent it.
>
> We advise you to carry out your own virus check before opening any
> attachment, as we cannot accept liability for any damage sustained as a
> result of any software viruses.
>
> ------ACB discussion List Information--------
> This is an open discussion list for the academic and clinical
> community working in clinical biochemistry.
> Please note, archived messages are public and can be viewed
> via the internet. Views expressed are those of the individual and
> they are responsible for all message content.
>
> ACB Web Site
> http://www.acb.org.uk
> List Archives
> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/ACB-CLIN-CHEM-GEN.html
> List Instructions (How to leave etc.)
> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/
>
>
>
> ================================================================
> This email has been processed by the Southend Hospital mail gateway.
> Any executable files or known viruses have been removed - We do not accept or send emails larger than 10MB.
> Confidential information in this email must be handled in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998.
> Details of all emails are archived for seven days. If this message has been sent to you in error please discard the email, notify the sender and do not open any attachments or act on the contents.
> For more information contact the IT Department, Southend Hospital NHS Trust on +44 1702 221 441
>
> ------ACB discussion List Information--------
> This is an open discussion list for the academic and clinical
> community working in clinical biochemistry.
> Please note, archived messages are public and can be viewed
> via the internet. Views expressed are those of the individual and
> they are responsible for all message content.
>
> ACB Web Site
> http://www.acb.org.uk
> List Archives
> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/ACB-CLIN-CHEM-GEN.html
> List Instructions (How to leave etc.)
> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/
----------------------
Vivekanandan Sachidanandam
------ACB discussion List Information--------
This is an open discussion list for the academic and clinical
community working in clinical biochemistry.
Please note, archived messages are public and can be viewed
via the internet. Views expressed are those of the individual and
they are responsible for all message content.
ACB Web Site
http://www.acb.org.uk
List Archives
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/ACB-CLIN-CHEM-GEN.html
List Instructions (How to leave etc.)
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/
|