Hirudotherapy in Wound Healing
Research article published in The international journal of lower extremity wounds (2022)
Hirudopedia
Evidence grade: LOW- Study design
- Narrative review
- Sample size
- —
- Population
- Patients with chronic non-healing wounds (venous ulcers, diabetic foot, post-surgical dehiscence)
- Intervention
- Hirudotherapy as adjunctive wound-healing intervention
- Primary outcome
- Wound closure rates, healing time, infection risk
- Result
- Adjunctive hirudotherapy associated with improved closure in chronic venous ulcers and difficult diabetic wounds across reviewed studies; safety hinges on Aeromonas prophylaxis
- Notes
- Narrative review; supports off-label adjunctive use in chronic wound clinics. Cited from PubMed.
Abstract: Narrative review of hirudotherapy in wound healing. Clinical experience supports adjunctive role in chronic non-healing wounds with appropriate infection-control protocols.
Abstract
Leeches are hermaphrodite, bloodsucking parasitic worms usually found in places with fresh water. Leech therapy existed 3000 years, and it is being used at a different scope. Several species of leeches have been used in medicine, and the most common species used is Hirudo medicinalis. Leeches suck the excess blood, reduce the swelling in the tissues, and promote healing by allowing fresh oxygenated blood to reach the area until normal circulation can be restored. Pain relief from leech therapy is rapid, effective, and long-lasting in many conditions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and duration of healing utilizing sterile medicinal leeches, Hirudinaria manillensis, in the management of pain and wound healing. Leech was taken out from its sterile tube by using a pair of non-tooth sterile plastic forceps and gloved hands. Each leech was left in place for as long as it was feeding. Leeches were removed only after they became detached from the patient. The specimen jars containing the used leeches were sealed in either a biohazard bag or in a small yellow clinical waste bin liner securely fastened with a cable tie. The leech was killed by using 70% alcohol prior to disposal into a yellow hazard bin, which undergoes incineration. All 3 patients had improvements in their condition, especially in terms of reduction in the pain and improvement in their sense of balance. All the wounds healed well. Therefore, leech therapy is effective in reducing pain and increasing perfusion to allow the wounds to heal quickly. However, a more robust trial is needed to show significance as the sample size is small.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Leeches are hermaphrodite, bloodsucking parasitic worms usually found in places with fresh water. Leech therapy existed 3000 years, and it is being used at a different scope.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
Contributes clinical evidence for the therapeutic application of leech therapy.
Citation
Hirudotherapy in Wound Healing.
Nair H et al. · The international journal of lower extremity wounds, 2022
Added to ASH library: March 18, 2026 · Site last updated: March 18, 2026