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Amazon plant takes the pain away

An anaesthetic gel from the Amazon could replace injections in the dentist’s surgery. Made from a plant that indigenous tribes discovered centuries ago, the gel is about to enter late-stage trials.   It is hoped the gel could end reliance on synthetic anaesthetics and anti-inflammatories.   Cambridge University anthropologist Francoise Freedman has helped develop it […]
Michelle Hammond

start-up-idea-rainforestAn anaesthetic gel from the Amazon could replace injections in the dentist’s surgery. Made from a plant that indigenous tribes discovered centuries ago, the gel is about to enter late-stage trials.

 

It is hoped the gel could end reliance on synthetic anaesthetics and anti-inflammatories.

 

Cambridge University anthropologist Francoise Freedman has helped develop it in conjunction with a Keshwa Lamas tribe that treated her wisdom tooth when she lived there in 1975.

 

Dr Freedman says the plant, which works by blocking nerve endings to provide a numbing effect lasting more than an hour, has proved successful in early stage clinical trials.

 

Freedman’s company Ampika Ltd – a product of the university’s commercial arm Cambridge Enterprise – could bring it to market as early as 2014.

 

While it’s not every day that a plant-based painkiller is uncovered, there is an increasing demand for natural remedies, so it could be worth looking into.