Journal of Blood Medicine (Oct 2014)

Al-hijamah and oral honey for treating thalassemia, conditions of iron overload, and hyperferremia: toward improving the therapeutic outcomes

  • El Sayed SM,
  • Baghdadi H,
  • Abou-Taleb A,
  • Mahmoud HS,
  • Maria RA,
  • Ahmed NS,
  • Helmy Nabo MM

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2014, no. default
pp. 219 – 237

Abstract

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Salah Mohamed El Sayed,1,2 Hussam Baghdadi,2 Ashraf Abou-Taleb,3 Hany Salah Mahmoud,4 Reham A Maria,2,5 Nagwa S Ahmed,1 Manal Mohamed Helmy Nabo6,71Department of Medical Biochemistry, Sohag Faculty of Medicine, Sohag University, Sohag, Egypt; 2Department of Clinical Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, Taibah Faculty of Medicine, Taibah University, Al-Madinah Al-Munawwarah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; 3Department of Pediatrics, Sohag Faculty of Medicine, Sohag University, Sohag; 4World Federation of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, Cairo Regional Headquarter, Cairo; 5Department of Medical Biochemistry, Tanta Faulty of Medicine, Tanta University, Tanta; 6Department of Pediatrics, Sohag Teaching Hospital, Sohag, Egypt; 7Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Department of Pediatrics, Maternity and Children Hospital, King Abdullah Medical City, Al-Madinah Al-Munawwarah, Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaAbstract: Iron overload causes iron deposition and accumulation in the liver, heart, skin, and other tissues resulting in serious tissue damages. Significant blood clearance from iron and ferritin using wet cupping therapy (WCT) has been reported. WCT is an excretory form of treatment that needs more research efforts. WCT is an available, safe, simple, economic, and time-saving outpatient modality of treatment that has no serious side effects. There are no serious limitations or precautions to discontinue WCT. Interestingly, WCT has solid scientific and medical bases (Taibah mechanism) that explain its effectiveness in treating many disease conditions differing in etiology and pathogenesis. WCT utilizes an excretory physiological principle (pressure-dependent excretion) that resembles excretion through renal glomerular filtration and abscess evacuation. WCT exhibits a percutaneous excretory function that clears blood (through fenestrated skin capillaries) and interstitial fluids from pathological substances without adding a metabolic or detoxification burden on the liver and the kidneys. Interestingly, WCT was reported to decrease serum ferritin (circulating iron stores) significantly by about 22.25% in healthy subjects (in one session) and to decrease serum iron significantly to the level of causing iron deficiency (in multiple sessions). WCT was reported to clear blood significantly of triglycerides, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, total cholesterol, uric acid, inflammatory mediators, and immunoglobulin antibodies (rheumatoid factor). Moreover, WCT was reported to enhance the natural immunity, potentiate pharmacological treatments, and to treat many different disease conditions. There are two distinct methods of WCT: traditional WCT and Al-hijamah (WCT of prophetic medicine). Both start and end with skin sterilization. In traditional WCT, there are two steps, skin scarification followed by suction using plastic cups (double S technique); Al-hijamah is a three-step procedure that includes skin suction using cups, scarification (shartat mihjam in Arabic), and second skin suction (triple S technique). Al-hijamah is a more comprehensive technique and does better than traditional WCT, as Al-hijamah includes two pressure-dependent filtration steps versus one step in traditional WCT. Whenever blood plasma is to be cleared of an excess pathological substance, Al-hijamah is indicated. We will discuss here some reported hematological and therapeutic benefits of Al-hijamah, its medical bases, methodologies, precautions, side effects, contraindications, quantitative evaluation, malpractice, combination with oral honey treatment, and to what extent it may be helpful when treating thalassemia and other conditions of iron overload and hyperferremia.Keywords: Al-hijamah, prophetic medicine, cupping therapy, phlebotomy, iron chelation therapy, oral honey