Shell amulets were
once thought to ward off ill health, infertility or bad luck. Shells have
also been ground up for use in potions and for various medicinal uses
throughout history. Today the shell, its living flesh and by products
are being studied and used in many areas of medicine. Some examples:
- The deadly
venoms of some Cone Shells (Conidae) are today being
used to help victims of strokes and heart disease, and to produce
a revolutionary new drug for chronic pain control
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Miscellaneous
cones
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Mercenaria
mercenaria
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- An extract
from the hard clam or "Quahog" (Mercenaria mercenaria
L.) is a strong growth inhibitor of cancers in mice. It is called
mercenine, after the clam's scientific name
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- Paolin,
a drug made from abalone juice, is an effective inhibitor of penicillin-
resistant strains of bacteria.
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Ground
and processed oyster shells are used as a calcium supplements
both for humans and animals.
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Oyster
juice has been found to have anti-viral properties, and
may be made into a drug eventually.
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Olympia Oyster
(Ostrea conchaphila)
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Mytilus edulis
Common
Names: The Common Mussel,Common bay mussel,blue mussel
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- The threads
that some mussels (Mytilidae) use to attach themselves
to rocks, piers, and other hard surfaces are being tested as possible
glue in surgery. (Note:
These are called "byssal" threads, from the Latin word byssus,
which means "fine linen", which is silky, like the fine threads
of many molluscs. Quite often, a Latin or Greek word borrowed
by science in this fashion.)
Mytilus
edulis
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- The cement
of the Carrier Shells (Xenophoridae)
is being studied for use as a possible cement for bone fractures.
(Note: The Carrier shells
are the camouflage experts of the mollusc world: they attach all
kinds of objects - shells, rocks, pieces of coral, sponges, bottle
caps. to their shells, so they look like a little pile of trash
on the bottom of the sea - a great way to avoid being eaten!
Shell shown is the Xenophora (Xenophora) mekranensis konoi Habe.
Picture courtesy of: Sharpe
Shells
xeno.html
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In the Peruvian
Andes, powdered mother of pearl is sold in the markets to promote
healing of wounds (unproven). (Note: Mother of pearl is the beautifully
iridescent interior of some bivalves, which the mollusc also uses
to surround small, irritating objects which get inside its mantle,
or outer body - forming a pearl!!)
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In Vietnam,
traditional medicine has a wide variety of uses for shells: powdered
oyster shell is taken to treat acid indigestion, fatigue and to stop
hemorrhage. It is also sprinkled over open wounds and boils. Cuttlefish
bones are used as a remedy for rickets (which is caused by lack of
vitamin C), a healing agent in the treatment of gastro-intestinal
troubles, a local anti-hemorrhagic (i.e., it stops internal bleeding),
and as an antiseptic is cases of inflammation of the middle ear. The
flat shell of the Abalone, with its iridescent inside, is powdered
and taken orally to improve vision, to remove keratoses (cataracts),
and to improve such conditions as hemeralopia (where you can see at
night well, but hardly at all in the daytime!. Powdered pearls from
oysters are used as a topical eye medicine (i.e., you put it right
on your eyes!!), and it has been scientifically proven to have some
anti-inflammatory effects on a painful condition called conjunctivitis,
where the surface of the eye becomes red and sore.
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