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For Bee, Scorpion Stings: Onions

People's Pharmacy Joe And Teresa Graedon

People's Pharmacy Joe and Teresa Graedon

June 08, 2009|By Joe and Teresa Graedon

Question: : You recently wrote about rubbing a cut onion on a bee sting to ease the pain. Swiss farmers have practiced this for centuries. In 1949, when I was stung by a bee right near the kneecap and was hurting badly, my farmer grandmother gave me a freshly cut onion and told me to rub it on the sting site for five minutes. After that, I could not even feel the sting or any pain anymore. I have used this remedy many times since.

Answer: : Thanks for this historical perspective. Onion contains compounds that can break down the proteins in bee venom.

We also heard from someone who experienced a different kind of sting: "Several years ago, I was stung on the leg by a scorpion. It was horribly painful. My leg turned red and started swelling above and below the site of the sting. At my mom's suggestion, I tried fresh-cut onion on the sting, and it worked great. In about 20 minutes, the redness had completely disappeared, the swelling stopped and the pain was almost completely gone."

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Some scorpion stings can be dangerous. If they cause numbness or tingling, blurry vision or muscle twitches, emergency treatment is advisable.

Question: : I have suffered from charley horse leg cramps as well as cramps in my feet, hands, rib cage or arms for years. At one time, I took quinine capsules, but they have been banned and are no longer available.

After reading about putting a bar of soap under the bottom sheet, I've recently tried this with a bar of Ivory for several weeks. I have not received the kind of relief that I was hoping to get.

Is there anything else I can do? There are days when the pain after a cramp is so bad that my legs and thighs are still tender in the morning and it hurts to walk.

Answer: : Although many people have found soap helpful against nighttime cramps, it does not work for everyone. We have also heard that a swig of pickle juice or a spoonful of yellow mustard might work to banish muscle cramps.

Question:: My daughter had so many warts on her hands that there was nothing the doctor could do. He said freezing or burning them off was out of the question.

He suggested Tagamet. That sounded weird, but she tried it. In two months, she had fewer warts. By the third month, her hands were as smooth as a baby's bottom, and she went to her prom with her head held high!

Answer:: Treating warts with heartburn medicine sounds a bit bizarre, but doctors have been doing it for years. Controlled trials of Tagamet (cimetidine) for warts have been inconclusive, but we've heard of other successes:

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