Beneficial secretions Medicinal leeches have been found to secrete
saliva containing about 60 different
proteins. These achieve a wide variety of goals useful to the leech as it feeds, helping to keep the blood in liquid form and increasing blood flow in the affected area. Several of these secreted proteins serve as
anticoagulants (such as
hirudin),
platelet aggregation inhibitors (most notably
apyrase,
collagenase, and calin),
vasodilators, and
proteinase inhibitors. It is also thought that the saliva contains an
anesthetic, as leech bites are generally not painful. of a cow with leech
Historically of a physician prescribing leeches for a weak, bedbound woman The first recorded use of leech therapy was 3,500 years ago in Ancient Egypt. The next recorded uses of leeches in medicine come in the last few centuries BCE, by the Greek physician
Nicander in
Colophon Leech therapy is mentioned a few hundred years later in
Shennong Bencaojing, a 3rd-century CE book of traditional Chinese medicine. Medical use of leeches was discussed by
Avicenna in
The Canon of Medicine (1020s), and by
Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi in the 12th century. These sources indicated leech therapy for a wide variety of ailments, including
edema, In medieval and early modern European medicine, the medicinal leech (
Hirudo medicinalis and its congeners
H. verbana,
H. troctina, and
H. orientalis) was used to remove blood from a patient as part of a process to balance the
humors that, according to
Galen, must be kept in balance for the human body to function properly. (The four humors of ancient medical philosophy were blood,
phlegm,
black bile, and
yellow bile.) Any sickness that caused the subject's skin to become red (e.g.
fever and inflammation), so the theory went, must have arisen from too much blood in the body. Similarly, any person whose behavior was strident and sanguine was thought to be suffering from an excess of blood. Leeches, by removing blood, were thought to help with these kinds of conditions—a wide range which included illnesses like
polio and
laryngitis. The use of leeches began to become less widespread towards the end of the 19th century. used to stimulate circulation in tissues threatened by postoperative venous congestion, particularly in finger reattachment and
reconstructive surgery of the ear, nose, lip, and eyelid. Other clinical applications of medicinal leech therapy include
varicose veins, muscle cramps,
thrombophlebitis, and
osteoarthritis, among many varied conditions. The therapeutic effect is not from the small amount of blood taken in the meal, but from the continued and steady bleeding from the wound left after the leech has detached, as well as the anesthetizing, anti-inflammatory, and vasodilating properties of the secreted leech saliva. Because of the minuscule amounts of
hirudin present in leeches, it is impractical to harvest the substance for widespread medical use. Hirudin (and related substances) are synthesized using
recombinant techniques. Devices called "mechanical leeches" that dispense
heparin and perform the same function as medicinal leeches have been developed, but they are not yet commercially available. == See also ==