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  • fuking ads fuk u jarem

  • Has anyone really tried this? I am not too sure if I would be tempting to lick the honey off(yuck) and won't ants or bees fly to your wound. I just visualized that. It's not pretty, but it's amusing.

  • i think ive seen this guy on mtv back in the 90s

  • Not so much peroxide, just soap and water. Peroxide kills helpful bacteria and damages the wound more. Very mild soap and water with soft, but firm brushes to get the foreign matter out as much as possible.

  • you want the ph balance of the water substance to always be closest to that of your skin as much as possible. That way your body won't fight as a "foreign material" as well as trying to heal the wound, rather, it will assimilate it and think of it as "addition help".

  • TY i got caught by the guidance councelor at school and the honey healed my cuts really fast XD

  • If someone uses honey in their wounds they'll be licking their wounds.....RRRRRR

  • In my experience a cut will heal in it's own time. There is nothng that you can rub onto a cut that will make it heal any faster. I've had years of experience with cuts. They won't be bullied into healing if they are not ready to dissapear.

  • i got a little cut on my node.....how long will it be there if i rub honey on it....

  • serious honey wow..i got a cut on my face and its looking like its gona be there for agess..tried so many things and its slowlyy going slowlyy

  • i mean this is just nonsense when you get a cut or a burn you may be able to promote initial skin healing (ie scab healing) bit if the skin has even been remotely damaged then nothing you do will have any effect. i dont understand this nonsence about faster cut healing. Theres no such thing.

  • There is substantial scientific evidence honey does improve wound healing. (Honey Research Unit Waikato University New Zealand) Apart from that honey has has been used effectively in wound healing since the dawn of mankind.

  • @Theesje

    Funny, why isn't there a single conclusive article on PubMed? The only things I can find seem to relate to burns, and the one that I did find comparing it to mafenide acetate suggested it wasn't statistically significant in time, but did lead to a greater chance of chondritis.

  • wow ur ignorant and stupid

  • @TheReaISkater You're telling someone who has produced dissertations and thesis on wound healing and natural/phramaceutical remedies. I have oceans of evidence to support the view that natural and pharmaceutical products are simply a swizz. They are marketed to the hilt to make gullible peole like you buy them. Honey may work on certain tissue damage but if you have breached the dermis layer of your skin you will be pushed to find anything on the market that will help heal a wound up faster.

  • that actually helped me ty

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