Therapeutic effect of bee venom in sows with hypogalactia syndrome postpartum
Author(s) -
Seok Hwa Choi,
Seong Soo Kang
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of veterinary science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.547
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1976-555X
pISSN - 1229-845X
DOI - 10.4142/jvs.2001.2.2.121
Subject(s) - bee venom , medicine , royal jelly , sting , bee pollen , traditional medicine , zoology , veterinary medicine , toxicology , biology , botany , pollen , engineering , aerospace engineering
The objective of this study was to determine the clincotherapeutic effect of whole bee venom in hypogalactic sows postpartum. Sows after parturition were assigned to treated and nontreated control groups. In the treated group, 22 sows were bee acupunctured once a day for 3 consecutive days. Honeybees (Apis mellifera L.) for bee acupuncture were about 15 days after metamorphosis. One live bee was used to sting the acupoints known as Yang-ming (ST-18, 1.5 cm lateral to the base of the last 2 pairs of teats) and Jiao-chao (GV-1, at the indentation between the base of tail and the anus). In the control group, 20 sows were intramuscularly injected with a standard dosage of penicillin G (400,000 IU/head) once a day for 3 consecutive days. At post-treatment, 85.0% of the drug-treated control and 90.9% of the bee venomtreated group recovered from hypogalactia syndrome. The advantages of apitherapy were that the patients did not have stress because they were not restrained for a long period. The result suggested that apitherapy using bee venom is an effective treatment for sows with hypogalactia syndrome postpartum.
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