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Healing skin ulcers

Aloe can help with ulcers

Q: I’ve had a venous ulcer on my ankle for some three months now, and hydrocolloidal bandages have not alleviated the almost constant pain. I’m 74 years old, in otherwise good health, and wonder whether I need complete rest, or whether I should do as much as I can (like gardening or fishing). – NW, Pembrokeshire

A: Leg ulcers appear as shallow holes or craters in the skin. They may be extremely painful and, in some cases, give off an unpleasant smell. It is not unusual for such ulcers to remain unhealed for many years.

Among conventional treatments, none stands out as being effective:

Venous ulcers are the most common type of leg ulcer, accounting for about 70 per cent of cases. Arterial and diabetic ulcers are also common. Although each involves a different mechanism, a common factor is often poor circulation.

Compression bandages, if fitted correctly, are one conventional approach that may help heal leg ulcers. Walking or any regular exercise will keep the calf muscle pumping blood efficiently. Stopping smoking and losing weight will also improve blood circulation. In addition:

If your ulcer is severe, you might consider hyperbaric oxygen therapy, where you sit in a chamber filled with highly concentrated oxygen. This for five days a week for six weeks significantly helped healing in non-diabetic chronic leg ulcers (Plast Reconstr Surg, 1994; 93: 829-34).

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