SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Biotech / Medical : GUMM - Eliminate the Common Cold -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hank who wrote (3672)2/15/2001 6:52:18 PM
From: Alastair McIntosh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5582
 
This may be of interest: (mentions Zicam)

cnn.com

Natural cures for the common cold?

(CNN) -- We've all felt the symptoms:
sniffling, sneezing, coughing, congestion.

The average American suffers two to six
colds a year, and as yet, there's no known cure. Nevertheless, pharmacies and
stores that sell alternative medicine therapies are stocked with products claiming
to be natural remedies for the common cold.

Herbal industry experts say Americans spend about $400 million each year on
cold treatments like zinc and echinacea. But natural remedies such as these are
only loosely regulated by the Food and Drug Administration and are on the
shelves despite conflicting evidence about whether they work.

Devona Beard got hit with the cold bug on a
Tuesday. "I came down with a headache, sniffles,
nasal congestion, nasal drip and sneezing," she
explained. She took zinc lozenges, and felt better
within a few days.

"Friday the symptoms kind of subsided. I felt
better by Friday evening," Beard said. By the
following Monday, Beard said she felt cured.

Her doctor, Dr. Ananda Prasad of Wayne State
University, published a study in the Annals of
Internal Medicine that looked at zinc lozenges and the common cold in 48
patients.

"We showed that by giving zinc lozenges, the duration of the cold was almost 50
percent decreased and severity was also decreased," Prasad said.

Prasad's study is just one of at least 10 careful studies evaluating zinc lozenges
for the common cold. Half the studies showed zinc shortens the duration of cold
symptoms; the other half showed it did not.

"In spite of the fact that these studies have been repeated and that the designs
have been modified in a way that has tried to make the studies more valid, we
continue to see this disparity in the final results of the study," said Dr. Ron
Turner, a noted cold remedy researcher at the Medical University of South
Carolina.

Turner said he has studied the same types of zinc as other researchers, with very
similar protocols, and found no benefit.

He has also studied another natural cold treatment, the herb echinacea. Although
his work found no benefit in echinacea, Turner points out the herb still may be
effective.

"It's important to realize," he explains, "that echinacea is not just one thing. There
are three difference species of echinacea which are used as herbal medicines.
The echinacea can be prepared in a variety of different ways... . So it's
impossible to say, based on a single study, echinacea does or doesn't work."

A third popular cold treatment, a zinc nasal spray called Zicam, showed very
promising results in a study of 213 patients published in ENT, the Ear, Nose and
Throat journal. Symptoms were reduced by as much as 75 percent.

Turner, however, called the study design flawed and cautioned that such
dramatic results must be replicated.

Some manufacturers of herbal products say word of mouth helps treatments like
these sell. If a product works wonders for one patient, he or she may pass the
word.

But the fact that a single patient gets better after taking a particular treatment
doesn't prove it had any real effect. "Everybody gets better from the common
cold," Turner noted, even if they go untreated.

Some patients may feel better because they believe the treatment will work -- a
phenomenon known as the placebo effect that's been shown to be very
powerful.

For cold sufferers seeking a more proven treatment there is hope on the horizon.
Early results on two potential remedies show they shorten the length of a cold by
a day or two. But because they are considered drugs and not natural remedies,
the FDA will require strong evidence they are safe and effective before they can
be sold.



To: Hank who wrote (3672)2/15/2001 8:36:09 PM
From: Mike M  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5582
 
Actually, Hank, if you had any sense at all you wouldn't have to ask what I was implying. Hardly a surprise it doesn't "make sense" to you. You could ask a friend to explain it, if you had one.