Scientific Proof that  Homeopathics WORK!!!

 

NEW SCIENTIST WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

No. 110, 10 November 2001

                     Andy Coghlan

 

Bizarre chemical discovery gives Homeopathic Credence!!!

It is a chance discovery so unexpected it defies belief and

proves there is a scientific basis for the fact that homeopathic medicines really work.

 

A team in South Korea has discovered a whole new dimension to just about

the simplest chemical reaction in the book - what happens when you

dissolve a substance in water and then add more water.

 

Conventional wisdom says that the dissolved molecules simply spread

further and further apart as a solution is diluted. But two chemists have

found that some do the opposite: they clump together, first as clusters of

molecules, then as bigger aggregates of those clusters. Far from drifting

apart from their neighbours, they got closer together.

 

The discovery has stunned chemists, and could provide the first scientific

insight into how some homeopathic remedies work.

Homeopaths repeatedly dilute medications, the higher the dilution, the more potent

the remedy becomes.

 

Some dilute to "infinity" until no molecules of the remedy remain.

The water holds a memory, or "imprint" of the active ingredient

which is more potent than the ingredient itself.

Others use less dilute solutions - often diluting a remedy six-fold.

The Korean findings at last reconcile the potency of these less dilute

solutions with orthodox science.

 

                  Completely counterintuitive

 

German chemist Kurt Geckeler and his colleague Shashadhar Samal

stumbled on the effect while investigating fullerenes at their lab in the

Kwangju Institute of Science and Technology in South Korea. They found

that the football-shaped buckyball molecules kept forming untidy aggregates

in solution, and Geckler asked Samal to look for ways to control how these

clumps formed.

 

What he discovered was a phenomenon new to chemistry. "When he diluted

the solution, the size of the fullerene particles increased," says

Geckeler. "It was completely counterintuitive," he says.

 

Further work showed it was no fluke. To make the otherwise insoluble

buckyball dissolve in water, the chemists had mixed it with a circular

sugar-like molecule called a cyclodextrin. When they did the same

experiments with just cyclodextrin molecules, they found they behaved the

same way. So did the organic molecule sodium guanosine monophosphate,

DNA and plain old sodium chloride.

 

Dilution typically made the molecules cluster into aggregates five to 10 times

as big as those in the original solutions. The growth was not linear, and it

depended on the concentration of the original.

 

"The history of the solution is important. The more dilute it starts, the

larger the aggregates," says Geckeler. Also, it only worked in polar

solvents like water, in which one end of the molecule has a pronounced

positive charge while the other end is negative.

 

                  Biologically active

 

But the findings provide a mechanism for showing how Homeopathic

medicines work - something that has defied scientific explanation till now.

Diluting a remedy increases the size of the particles to the point when

they become biologically active.

 

It also echoes the controversial claims of French immunologist Jacques

Benveniste. In 1988, Benveniste claimed in a Nature paper that a solution

that had once contained antibodies still activated human white blood cells.

Benveniste claimed the solution still worked because it contained ghostly

"imprints" in the water structure where the antibodies had been.

 

                  Double-check

 

Chemist Jan Enberts of the University of Groningen in the Netherlands is

more cautious. "It's still a totally open question," he says. "To say the

phenomenon has biological significance is pure speculation." But he has no

doubt Samal and Geckeler have discovered something new. "It's surprising

and worrying," he says.

 

The two chemists were at pains to double-check their astonishing results.

Initially they had used the scattering of a laser to reveal the size and

distribution of the dissolved particles. To check, they used a scanning

electron microscope to photograph films of the solutions spread over slides.

This, too, showed that dissolved substances cluster together as dilution

increased.

 

"It proves Homeopathy, and it's congruent with what we think and is

very encouraging," says Peter Fisher, director of medical research at the

Royal London Homeopathic Hospital.

 

"The whole idea of high-dilution homeopathy hangs on the idea that water

has properties which are not understood," he says. "The fact that the new

effect happens with a variety of substances suggests it's the solvent that's

responsible. It's in line with what many homeopaths say, that you can only

make homeopathic medicines in polar solvents."

 

Geckeler and Samal are now anxious that other researchers follow up their

work. "We want people to repeat it," says Geckeler. "If it's confirmed it will

be groundbreaking".

 

                  Journal reference: Chemical Communications (2001, p 2224)

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