Worth the sting: Cuba's scorpion pain
remedy
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[December 17, 2018]
By Rodrigo Gutierrez and Sarah Marsh
HAVANA (Reuters) - Once a month for the
last decade, Pepe Casanas, a 78-year-old Cuban farmer, has hunted down a
scorpion to sting himself with, vowing that the venom wards off his
rheumatism pains.
His natural remedy is no longer seen as very unusual here.
Researchers in Cuba have found that the venom of the blue scorpion,
whose scientific name is Rhopalurus junceus, endemic to the Caribbean
island, appears to have anti-inflammatory and pain relief properties,
and may be able to delay tumor growth in some cancer patients.
While some oncologists abroad say more research is needed to be able to
properly back up such a claim, Cuban pharmaceutical firm Labiofam has
been using scorpion venom since 2011 to manufacture the homeopathic
medicine Vidatox.
The remedy has proven popular.
Labiofam Business Director Carlos Alberto Delgado told Reuters sales
were climbing 10 percent annually. Vidatox already sells in around 15
countries worldwide and is currently in talks with China to sell the
remedy there.
In Cuba, where tens of thousands of patients have been treated with
Vidatox, each vial costs under a dollar. On the black market abroad it
can cost hundred times that - retailers on Amazon.com are seen selling
them for up to $140.
"I put the scorpion where I feel pain," Casanas said while demonstrating
his homemade pain relief with a scorpion that he found under a pile of
debris on the patch of land he cultivates in Cuba's western province of
Pinar del Rio.
After squeezing it long enough, it stung him and he winced.
"It hurts for a while, but then it calms and goes and I don't have any
more pain," he said.
Casanas, a leathery-skinned former tobacco farmer who now primarily
grows beans for his own consumption, said he sometimes keeps a scorpion
under his straw hat like a lucky charm.
It likes the shade and humidity, he says, so just curls up and sleeps.
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A worker extracts venom from a scorpion to produce homeopathic
medicine Vidatox at LABIOFAM, the Cuban state manufacturer of
medicinal and personal hygienic products, in Cienfuegos, Cuba,
December 3, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer
FROM FARM TO LAB
In a Labiofam laboratory in the southern Cuban city of Cienfuegos,
workers dressed in scrubs and hairnets tend to nearly 6,000
scorpions housed in plastic containers lined up on rows of metal
racks.
Every few days they feed and water the arachnids that sit on a bed
of small stones. Once a month, they apply an 18V electrical jolt to
their tails using a handcrafted machine in order to trigger the
release of a few drops of venom.
The venom is then diluted with distilled water and shaken
vigorously, which homeopathic practitioners believe activates its
"vital energy."
The scorpions are caught in the wild as Labiofam workers believe
their venom - which is not dangerous - is not as potent when raised
in captivity.
After two years of exploitation in the "escorpionario," they are
released back into the wild.
Dr. Fabio Linares, the head of Labiofam's homeopathic medicine
laboratory who developed the medicine, said Vidatox stimulates the
body's natural defense mechanisms.
"After four to five years (of taking it), the doctor whose care I
was in told me that my cancer hadn't advanced," said Cuban patient
Jose Manuel Alvarez Acosta, who was diagnosed with prostate cancer
in 2008.
Still, Labiofam recommends Vidatox as a supplemental treatment and
says it should not replace conventional ones.
(Reporting by Sarah Marsh, editing by G Crosse)
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