Iran-Made Herbal Medicine Heals Wounds in Animals
8:05 - November 05, 2024

Iran-Made Herbal Medicine Heals Wounds in Animals

TEHRAN (ANA)- Iranian researchers at a knowledge-based company succeeded in making research and developing a herbal medicine which enjoys wound-healing features in livestock and poultry.
News ID : 7394

“We produced a herbal medicine from the mazo plant and extracted it. All the active ingredients inside this plant have been completely stabilized for the production of medicine,” Shaqayeq Talajouy, the managing director of the knowledge-based company, told ANA.

“The herbal medicine can repair and treat open and superficial wounds of livestock and poultry, which has made good progress in the animal testing stage,” she added.

Noting that medical substances are used in other medicine like antibiotic which heal the animal wounds, Talajouy said that the company's medicine is completely herbal and does not create antibacterial resistance in any living organism.”

“This medicine has no foreign sample and it is produced and sold for the first time in Iran,” she underlined.

In a relevant development last year, researchers at an Iranian knowledge-based company have produced a herbal ointment to treat skin burns and blisters from sweating.

“The ointment, which has been produced based on plant materials, has antibacterial properties. At the same time, it is very effective to heal blisters from sweating,” Hana Allahdadi, one of the directors of the knowledge-based company said, according to a report by the Iranian Vice Presidency for Science and Technology and Knowledge-Based Economy.

She stated that this ointment is also used to heal infected wounds and blisters, adding, “This ointment can prevent the worsening and spread of the infection.”

Allahdadi considered the superiority of this ointment over its counterparts available in the market to be its quick effectiveness, compatibility with all skin types and no limits on its use for different people.

“This product is completely herbal and is produced from a combination of two plants, ferulag and thyme. Therfore, it can be helpful even for people with sensitive skin,” the researcher concluded.

4155/v

 

 

 

Send comment