Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT-B) group of students illustrates the functioning of homeopathy.


Last Updated: 2010-12-16T00:36:51+05:30

IIT-B Students Illustrate How Homeopathy Works

Mumbai: Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT-B) students illustrate the functioning of homeopathy. IIT B students said that the sweet pills work on the principle of nanotechnology. The students have explained this six months after the British Medical Association rubbished homeopathy as witchcraft with no scientific basis.
 
The IIT-Bombay research published in the latest issue of 'Homeopathy', which is a peer-reviewed journal from reputed medical publishing firm Elsevier, states that homeopathic pills containing naturally occurring metals such as gold, copper and iron retain their potency even when diluted to a nanometre or one-billionth of a metre.
 
Moreover, IIT-B's chemical engineering department bought homeopathic pills from neighbourhood shops, prepared highly diluted solutions and checked these under powerful electron microscopes to find nanoparticles of the original metal. Dr Jayesh Bellare from the scientific team has said that certain highly diluted homeopathic remedies made from metals still contain measurable amounts of the starting material, even at extreme dilutions of 1 part in 10 raised to 400 parts (200C).  
 

Besides, a student, Prashant Chikramane, presented the homeopathy paper titled, 'Extreme homeopathic dilutions retain starting materials: A nanoparticulate perspective', as part of his doctoral thesis. In addition, Dr Bellare has said that Homeopathy has been a conundrum for modern medicine. Its practitioners maintained that homeopathic pills got more potent on dilution, but they could never explain the mechanism scientifically enough for the modern scientists.

- By Raihan Hassan
PrintRecommend This Site
Report Error



move to top