Hendrickson, M. A. Utilizing active
Henriques A., et al. Free radical production and quenching in honeys with wound healing potential.
Henriques A. F., et al. The intracellular effects of manuka honey on
Heppermann, B. Towards evidence based emergency medicine: Best BETs from the Manchester Royal Infirmary. Bet 3. Honey for the symptomatic relief of cough in children with upper respiratory tract infections.
Holzgreve, H. Honey is better than aciclovir in herpes.
Hon, J. Using honey to heal a chronic wound in a patient with epidermolysis bullosa.
Ingle, R., et al. Wound healing with honey – a randomised controlled trial.
Irish, J., et al. Antibacterial activity of honey from the Autralian stingless bee
Irish, J., et al. Honey has an antifungal effect against
Johnson, D. W., et al. The honeypot study of protocol: a randomized controlled trial of exitsite application of Medihoney antibacterial wound gel for the prevention of catheterassociated infections in peritoneal dialysis patients.
Jull, A., et al. Randomized clinical trial of honeyimpregnated dressings for venous leg ulcers.
Jull, A. B, et al. Honey as a topical treatment of wounds.
Khan, F. R., et al. Honey: nutritional and medicinal value.
Khanal, B., et al. Effect of topical honey on limitation of radiation-induced oral mucositis: an intervention study.
Khoo, Y. T., et al. Wound contraction effects and antibacterial properties of tualang honey on fullthickness burn wounds in rats in comparison to hydrofibre.
Kiefer, S., et al. (E,Z)-3-(3ˇ,5ˇ-dimethoxy-4ˇ-hydroxy-benzylidene)-2-indolinone blocks mast cell degranulation.
Koc, A. N., et al. Antifungal activity of Turkish honey against
Kwakman, P. H., et al. How honey kills bacteria.
Kwakman, P. H., et al. Medical-grade honey enriched with antimicrobial peptides has enhanced activity against antibiotic-resistant pathogens.
Kwakman, P. H., et al. Medical-grade honey kills antibiotic-resistant bacteria in vitro and eradicates skin colonization.
Langemo, D. K., et al. Use of honey for wound healing.
Lay-flurrie, K. Honey in wound care: effects, clinical application and patient benefit.
Lotfy, M., et al. Combined use of honey, bee propolis and myrrh in healing a deep, infected wound in a patient with diabetes mellitus.
Lusby, P. E., et al. Bactericidal activity of different honeys against pathogenic bacteria.
Lusby, P. E., et al. A comparison of wound healing following treatment with
Maeda, Y., et al. Antibacterial activity of honey against community-associated methicillinresistant
Majtán, J. Apitherapy – the role of honey in the chronic wound healing process.
Majtan, J., et al. Effect of honey and its major royal jelly protein 1 on cytokine and MMP-9 mRNA transcripts in human keratinocytes.