Orangutan Effectively Self-Medicates to Heal Facial Wound

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is currently investigating whether Rakus the orangutan conducted a randomized double-blind clinical trial to prove the safety and efficacy of akar kuning before he applied it to his wound.

(p. D3) Scientists observed a wild male orangutan repeatedly rubbing chewed-up leaves of a medicinal plant on a facial wound in a forest reserve in Indonesia.

. . .

“Once I heard about it, I got extremely excited,” said Isabelle Laumer, a primatologist with the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior in Germany, in part because records of animals medicating themselves are rare — even more so when it comes to treating injuries. She and colleagues detailed the discovery in a study published Thursday [May 2, 2024] in the journal Scientific Reports.

The plant Rakus used, known as akar kuning or yellow root, is also used by people throughout Southeast Asia to treat malaria, diabetes and other conditions. Research shows it has anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties.

. . .

Orangutans rarely eat the plant. But in this case, Rakus ingested a small amount and also coated the wound several times. Five days after the wound was noticed, it had closed, and less than a month later “healed without any signs of infection,” Dr. Laumer said.

Michael Huffman, a visiting professor at the Institute of Tropical Medicine at Nagasaki University in Japan, who wasn’t involved in the study, said, “This is to the best of my knowledge the first published study to demonstrate an animal using a plant with known biomedical properties for the treatment of a wound.”

Primates have been observed appearing to treat wounds in the past, but not with plants. A group of more than two dozen chimpanzees in Gabon in Central Africa have been seen chewing up and applying flying insects to their wounds, said Simone Pika, an expert on animal cognition at Osnabrück University in Germany who documented that observation.

For the full story see:

Douglas Main. “Primate Self-Medicates To Heal His Wound.” The New York Times (Tuesday, May 7, 2024): D3.

(Note: ellipses, and bracketed date, added.)

(Note: the online version of the story has the date May 2, 2024, and has the title “Orangutan, Heal Thyself.”)

Laumer’s co-authored academic paper mentioned above is:

Laumer, Isabelle B., Arif Rahman, Tri Rahmaeti, Ulil Azhari, Hermansyah, Sri Suci Utami Atmoko, and Caroline Schuppli. “Active Self-Treatment of a Facial Wound with a Biologically Active Plant by a Male Sumatran Orangutan.” Scientific Reports 14, no. 1 (2024): article #8932.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *