Emu Oil is This Physician's
Choice
by Beth Silva
Hundreds of patients who have visited
Dr. Dan Dean of Dan C. Dean D.O. & Associates in Mt. Pleasant,
Michigan are receiving relief from various ailments, thanks
in part to treatments with emu oil. A commodity acknowledged
for centuries for its medicinal purposes, emu oil is just
beginning to be touted and recognized by some in the medical
field in this country.
Typical of the medical practitioner,
Dean was at first some what skeptical about the reputed medicinal
and cosmetic benefits of emu oil. The doctor remarks that
his initial research in earnest on the oil happened on a trip
to Australia several years ago. But the physician, also an
avid Thoroughbred enthusiast, was won over only after emu
oil was used to save one of his top racers, The Rebalizer.
Dean explains that the horse picked up the Salmonella infection,
was treated at the Michigan State University, but developed
an allergic reaction to all the IV steroids, antibiotics,
etc., it received and subsequently lost all it's hair and
much of its stamina.
Knowing that emu oil had a reputation
to stimulate skin and hair growth, the doctor decided to give
it a try on his favored horse. Ultra sensitive to touch, The
Rebalizer had to be stilled for the first few applications
of pure emu oil to his bare hide. But Dean says that after
twice-a-day applications for three days, the animal welcomed
the employment of the oil. Shortly after the treatments began,
his horse's health and hair returned! Dean says that after
researching the oil further, he began using it on himself,
his family and then patients, with incredible results.
Now, two years later, hundreds of the
doctors patients (as well as some patients of other physicians
sent to Dean) are realizing benefit from emu oil. On a typical
day, the doctor uses the oil on individuals suffering from
burns, abrasions, sore joints, eczema, arthritis, colitis,
psoriasis, and as a wound application immediately following
surgery.
"It's all voluntary," says
Dean. "I explain to the patients what the oil is and
what I'll be doing. I've had exceptional results with the
oil and we haven't had one patient complain. Actually, many
people come in and ask for it. When surgery patients leave
they are given a small container of the pure oil to be applied
to their wound three times a day to speed up the healing process.
In the office we use the pure emu oil directly on open burns,
abrasions and ulcerations. We only use pure emu oil with no
added ingredients. It's an amazing substance."
The doctor utilizes the oil's moisturizing
properties by compounding an emu oil nasal spray and cough
syrup formula for some of his patients. "When cold and
flue season starts, we'll use the oil on a minimum of 15 patients
a day," he says.
When asked what impresses him most
about the oil's properties as a practicing physician, Dean
replies, "the thing that's most impressive about the
oil is I can actually see (view photos on page 2) the way
it affects open wound healing, which I'm very interested in."
The doctor is also presently researching
wound healing utilizing emu oil to learn more about the oil's
properties with Dr. Leigh Hopkins, a comrade who is a clinical
professor of pharmacy with a degree in biochemistry.
"We've got the cart before the
horse," says Dean. " We know the oil works, but
we want to look deeper into the microphysiology and biology
of just why it does work."
Actually, emu oil is being utilized
and researched quietly by a growing number of individuals
in the medical field including cancer centers interested in
the oil's effects on burns sustained by patients during radiation
treatments. Dean himself has a growing number of patients
being referred to him by other medical professionals. Of this
he says, "Slowly we're getting other physicians interested
in the oil. It's a little hard to convince doctors, but I
don't push the emu oil on them, I let them come to me. Now
some are asking, What are you using? and Why
did so-and-so heal so fast?"
An 80-year-old diabetic patient with
gangrene of the toes and a serious heel ulceration was recently
referred to Dean. "The surgeon who sent the patient down
said it looked like they were going to have to amputate the
foot," relates the doctor. " But I suggested that
we first try the emu oil. And by using the emu oil we were
able to completely heal the ulceration on the heel and there's
no gangrene in the toes - they're just as pink as can be.
The surgeon's comment was, 'It looks like emu oil turned this
thing around. We're not going to amputate.' We used only pure
oil in the treatment and it saved this gentlemen's foot!"
Patients of open heart surgery also
receive emu oil on their freshly stitched incision. Dean says
that when they return to their thoracic surgeon for a follow
up with a well healed sternum incision, the surgeons always
comment on how fast the incision healed.
Convalescents of a nearby extended
care facility also benefit from the medicinal advantage of
emu oil. Dean says that he is currently using the oil on individuals
with pressure sores. "We're using the oil when the sore
is actually a grade 1 - when we just see the inflammation
of the skin. And I think because of the oil's penetrability,
we're able to prevent the sores rather than having to cure
them," he remarks.
Dean is helping to spread the interest
in emu oil. He delivered the slide presentation "Wound
Management With Emu Oil" at the 1998 Annual American
Emu Association Convention this July in San Antonio and relates
that he was recently approached by a drug company (that usually
features a discourse on one of their own products) to deliver
a presentation on emu oil to an all-doctor audience. He mentions
that he has also been petitioned by an Alternative Medicine
group out of Chicago to speak on emu oil.
To better serve individuals requesting
the oil, Dean recently began offering a line of several specially
formulated and pretested emu oil products for medicinal and
cosmetic applications called "The Dean's List."
And this May the doctor received a Humanitarian award for
his continuing work in the field of family practice, as well
as a New Product Award for his product line from the Award
Committee for the International Hall of Fame, sponsored by
the Inventors Clubs of America Inc.
Through Rishada Emu Inc., Dean currently
has available six products which he says contain a high percentage
of emu oil and include a hand lotion, skin moisturizer, skin
tightener, body cleanser, shampoo, and 100 percent pure emu
oil. "I'm real excited about all our products and people's
response to them is amazing," says the doctor, who has
additional emu oil product on line.
Dean says that he will continue to
research the oil and use it in his practice. "I wouldn't
quit!" he says.
Dan C. Dean attended Northern Oklahoma
College, Central State University and received his Doctorate
of Osteopathy at Missouri's Kirksville College of Osteopathy
and Surgery. Dr. Dean has been practicing medicine for the
past 28 years and currently conducts his practice in two clinics
in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan.
Emu Today & Tomorrow
* Oct. 1998 (reprinted with permission).
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