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News > Singapore Zoo
Heals Animals with Herbs & Acupuncture |
Singapore zoo heals animals with herbs &
acupuncture
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SINGAPORE (Reuters Life!) - Acupuncture for a
limping elephant? Herbal tea for a constipated orangutan? The Singapore Zoo has
tried it all, and it works.
Around 200 animals, including giraffes, elephants, horses, pythons and sea
lions, have successfully been treated with acupuncture and traditional
herb-based Chinese medicine in the past decade, although Western medicine
remains the first line of treatment in the zoo.
"The Western medicine did not always work, so we had to find other solutions,"
Oh Soon Hock, a senior veterinarian at the zoo told Reuters on Friday.
Earlier this week the zoo received a S$30,000 ($19,700) grant for further
research into traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) for animals from a
Singapore-based firm that produces TCM.
Oh -- who was trained in Western veterinarian medicine but also studied Chinese
medicine -- said this sort of healing is typically used after Western medicine
fails to produce results.
He said an orangutan who had received modern medication for constipation for
more than a year recovered after drinking an ancient Chinese brew of herbs,
ground and dissolved in its honey drink, for just one week.
The zoo has also used acupuncture to reduce the swelling around the fractured
leg of a sedated cheetah.
Treating an elephant with acupuncture requires some industrial-size needles to
pierce its 2.5 centimetre (one inch) thick hide and sometimes through 15
centimetres of muscles.
The custom-made stainless steel needles are 15 to 20 cm long and 0.6 mm (0.024
inch) thick, Oh said.
"We use stainless steel needles because they bend but won't break," Oh said,
adding that the needles need to pierce through the hide and muscles to get close
to the bones for the treatment to be most effective.
Acupuncture, an ancient Chinese treatment, stimulates blood circulation by
sticking needles at specific points of the body through which the body's energy
flows.
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