About the memory of water ...
Experiments have backed what was once a
scientific 'heresy'..
Lionel Milgrom
Guardian
Thursday March 15, 2001
Thanks for the memory.
A bout homeopathy, Professor Madeleine Ennis of Queen's University Belfast is, like
most scientists, deeply sceptical. That a medicinal compound diluted out of existence
should still exert a therapeutic effect is an affront to conventional biochemistry and
pharmacology, based as they are on direct and palpable molecular events. The same goes for
a possible explanation of how homoeopathy works: that water somehow retains a
"memory" of things once dissolved in it.
This last notion, famously promoted by French biologist Dr Jacques Benveniste, cost
him his laboratories, his funding, and ultimately his international scientific
credibility. However, it did not deter Professor Ennis who, being a scientist, was not
afraid to try to prove Benveniste wrong. So, more than a decade after Benveniste's
excommunication from the scientific mainstream, she jumped at the chance to join a large
pan-European research team, hoping finally to lay the Benveniste "heresy" to
rest. But she was in for a shock: for the team's latest results controversially now
suggest that Benveniste might have been right all along.
Back in 1985, Benveniste began experimenting with human white blood cells involved in
allergic reactions, called basophils. These possess tiny granules containing substances
such as histamine, partly responsible for the allergic response. The granules can be
stained with a special dye, but they can be decolourised (degranulated) by a substance
called anti-immunoglobulin E or aIgE. That much is standard science. What Benveniste
claimed so controversially was that he continued to observe basophil degranulation even
when the aIgE had been diluted out of existence, but only as long as each dilution step,
as with the preparation of homoeopathic remedies, was accompanied by strong agitation.
After many experiments, in 1988 Benveniste managed to get an account of his work published
in Nature, speculating that the water used in the experiments must have retained a
"memory" of the original dissolved aIgE. Homoeopaths rejoiced, convinced that
here at last was the hard evidence they needed to make homoeopathy scientifically
respectable. Celebration was short-lived. Spearheaded by a Nature team that famously
included a magician (who could find no fault with Benveniste's methods - only his
results), Benveniste was pilloried by the scientific establishment.
A British attempt (by scientists at London's University College, published in Nature in
1993) to reproduce Benveniste's findings failed. Benveniste has been striving ever since
to get other independent laboratories to repeat his work, claiming that negative findings
like those of the British team were the result of misunderstandings of his experimental
protocols. Enter Professor Ennis and the pan-European research effort.
A consortium of four independent research laboratories in France, Italy, Belgium, and
Holland, led by Professor M Roberfroid at Belgium's Catholic University of Louvain in
Brussels, used a refinement of Benveniste's original experiment that examined another
aspect of basophil activation. The team knew that activation of basophil degranulation by
aIgE leads to powerful mediators being released, including large amounts of histamine,
which sets up a negative feedback cycle that curbs its own release. So the experiment the
pan-European team planned involved comparing inhibition of basophil aIgE-induced
degranulation with "ghost" dilutions of histamine against control solutions of
pure water.
In order to make sure no bias was introduced into the experiment by the scientists from
the four laboratories involved, they were all "blinded" to the contents of their
test solutions. In other words, they did not know whether the solutions they were adding
to the basophil-aIgE reaction contained ghost amounts of histamine or just pure water. But
that's not all. The ghost histamine solutions and the controls were prepared in three
different laboratories that had nothing further to do with the trial.
The whole experiment was coordinated by an independent researcher who coded all the
solutions and collated the data, but was not involved in any of the testing or analysis of
the data from the experiment. Not much room, therefore, for fraud or wishful thinking. So
the results when they came were a complete surprise.
Three of the four labs involved in the trial reported a statistically significant
inhibition of the basophil degranulation reaction by the ghost histamine solutions
compared with the controls. The fourth lab gave a result that was almost significant, so
the total result over all four labs was positive for the ghost histamine solutions.
Still, Professor Ennis was not satisfied. "In this particular trial, we stained the
basophils with a dye and then hand-counted those left coloured after the histamine-
inhibition reaction. You could argue that human error might enter at this stage." So
she used a previously developed counting protocol that could be entirely automated. This
involved tagging activated basophils with a monoclonal antibody that could be observed via
fluorescence and measured by machine.
The result, shortly to be published in Inflammation Research, was the same: histamine
solutions, both at pharmacological concentrations and diluted out of existence, lead to
statistically significant inhibition of basophile activation by aIgE, confirming previous
work in this area.
"Despite my reservations against the science of homoeopathy," says Ennis,
"the results compel me to suspend my disbelief and to start searching for a rational
explanation for our findings." She is at pains to point out that the pan-European
team have not reproduced Benveniste's findings nor attempted to do so.
Jacques Benveniste is unimpressed. "They've arrived at precisely where we started 12
years ago!" he says. Benveniste believes he already knows what constitutes the
water-memory effect and claims to be able to record and transmit the "signals"
of biochemical substances around the world via the internet. These, he claims, cause
changes in biological tissues as if the substance was actually present.
The consequences for science if Benveniste and Ennis are right could be earth shattering,
requiring a complete re-evaluation of how we understand the workings of chemistry,
biochemistry, and pharmacology.
One thing however seems certain. Either Benveniste will now be brought in from the cold,
or Professor Ennis and the rest of the scientists involved in the pan-European experiment
could be joining him there.