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Emu Oil Research Emu
Oil in General Emu
Cream Assists Lidocaine: The other groups are the esters and are much more likely to give you a reaction because they contain para-amino-benzoid-acid (PABA) which a lot of us have been sensitized to in our sunscreens and other products. Lidocaine is also reasonable in cost and readily available. It's the most understood local anesthetic and a prototype in general. Most ideas aren't new ideas. The concept of emu oil as being useful for any number of things primarily originated from the people who have used it for many centuries. Actually, some of the oldest people on Earth, as far as the time that they've been here, are the Australoid race, or the Australian Aborigines. The problem
I wanted to address as something to think about is the problem with
punctures in the skin of planned-for-needle insertion. The obvious
one that comes to mind to an anesthesiologist is to start an intravenous
drugs. We want to know in a few seconds whether the anesthetic is
working or not. Suturing of wounds is always a tough consideration - the decision is whether to put the local anesthetic in, and make two or three holes, or just go straight ahead and suture with a tiny needle. If you had a relatively sterile entity that could numb it either before the injection with the needle, or with regard to the wound itself, then you might be a lot further ahead. Laser therapy typically is done with injection and can be quite painful in some parts of the body, as most of you are aware, especially the pain of the hand or the base of the foot. The traditional over-the-counter preparation in both Canada and the U.S. is EMLA cream, which stand for eutectic mixture of local anesthetics. It has lidocaine in it and another agent called prilacaine. It doesn't work as well as I'd like it to. It has a relatively slow action, a minimum of 45 minutes, so that requires pre-planning. If you're going to see somebody in an operating room suite, it literally has to be put on by someone at your suggestion beforehand, or you have to get the parent to purchase it at home and put it on. Do they put it on the right place? Do they put it on in the right amount? How does it proceed from there? Unfortunately now, many pediatric institutions are withdrawing or reducing their use of the cream because it's been somewhat erratic as to whether it's actually served a purpose or not. It's often built up impressions and potential feelings, but sometimes those have been very disappointed in the actual use thereof. The emu substance
used in this particular pilot study was what I call a cream, the thick
version of the refined product versus the clear oil. We then did
two major tests on the individuals. The common one we used initially
was ice. That's because in my practice in the operating room. I found
that if you can check with an ice cube where people can tolerate the
ice cube, and not tell when they're going to have sharpness from the
incision with the cold hard steel knife. Then, of course, we used
pinpricks because most people were kind of intrigued with the idea
that this actually made any difference. Because each individual had
the substance A or B in each instance, and; correspondingly, the observer
of the ice and pin pricks was also blinded. In the discussion, this has to be done with co-called consistent, proven pain stimulus. The pain and temperature, just for those that aren't as comfortable with the physiology, are virtually teted by the same thing. What I mean is, acute sharp pain, and warm and cold sensations, tend to be affected and carried by the came fibers and the same components of the spinal cord. It's not that same as the burning of dull pain that starts after a few seconds. That in a different type of pain fiber again. When we're talking about the next step, the clinical trial, we'll need to start with adults. Where we want to use it is in children, but typically, you can't have much success with the groups within the hospitals discussing the study unless it's been proven on adults. Of course,
the million dollar, multinational question if "Will emu oils
work?" "Which ones will work better?" "Is there
a particular feature in emu oil that does work better?" I know
that people have tried local anesthetics on their own, and local anesthetics
in mineral oil. Whether they've tried it in pure oleic acid, I don't
know. Courtesy of AEA
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