Medical Does dehydration have any role in anti-inflammation?

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The discussion revolves around a sentence from an unpublished work stating that "Chloramphenicol has anti-inflammatory (dehydrating) and antimicrobial effects." Participants express confusion over the relationship between dehydration and inflammation, questioning whether the term "dehydrating" is a typo or if it has a valid scientific basis. The conversation highlights the necessity of fluid for metabolic waste removal, suggesting that dehydration may not logically correlate with anti-inflammatory effects. As the discussion progresses, it becomes clear that the original poster finds the claims in the unpublished work to be poorly constructed and potentially pseudoscientific. Ultimately, they conclude that the author likely made an error regarding the dehydration claim and express gratitude for the insights gained from the discussion, indicating a desire to correct the author’s mistakes.
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I do not understand the sentence, "Chloramphenicol has anti-inflammatory (dehydrating) and antimicrobial effects". What does dehydration have to do with inflammation in this case?
I came across (in an unpublished work, hence no citation) the sentence, "Chloramphenicol has anti-inflammatory (dehydrating) and antimicrobial effects". Does dehydration help fight inflammation, or what? Could it be a typo meaning "anti-inflammatory and dehydrating"?
 
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Fluid i.e. water is necessary to remove metabolic wastes? How can dehydration be anti inflammatory?
 
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@gleem
If it is a clinical report, whatever a physician sees and wants to report can go in the report. That's the way it usually works.

As it stands: We do not know what the source is. If it purports to be science you are completely correct with your comment. If it is from clinical observations, you should let it slide.

Do not believe me, do some research on clinical notes, reports, and opinions.
 
nomadreid said:
Summary: I do not understand the sentence, "Chloramphenicol has anti-inflammatory (dehydrating) and antimicrobial effects". What does dehydration have to do with inflammation in this case?

came across (in an unpublished work, hence no citation) the sentence, "Chloramphenicol has anti-inflammatory (dehydrating) and antimicrobial effects". Does dehydration help fight inflammation, or what? Could it be a typo meaning "anti-inflammatory and dehydrating"?

Where did you come across this work?
 
Thanks for the helpful replies, jim mcnamara and gleem. This is from a forthcoming book dealing with a certain topic in medicine that I have been asked to translate. The chronology should explain my eventual conclusion:
Reading first section: "I don't understand this. It doesn't seem to make sense to me, but maybe this is due to the fact that this is not my field. I better turn to the nice people in Physics Forums." (my post).
Reading a bit further: "OMG, this is awfully sloppy. Lots of mistakes and sloppy reasoning. So, according to the helpful answers in Physics Forums, I guess this bit about dehydration is just a mistake of the author. I will put it on my list of points that the author should correct."
Reading even further: "Good grief! This is so bad that it verges on pseudoscience. I am sorry to have bothered the nice people in Physics Forums over it. But at least I learned something."
So, I have concluded that, giving the author the benefit of the doubt, she made an error. (If I didn't assume this, then the only conclusion would be that she doesn't know what she is talking about, or doesn't care. Which is also possible, but I wish to be generous.)
Therefore I believe the issue is settled, and thus the thread may be closed, with my gratitude and (where appropriate) apologies.
 
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