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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (75345)4/11/2006 3:27:09 PM
From: StockDungRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Rush Limbaugh Recommends Zicam on audio

mfile.akamai.com

Here is the other product Rush Limbaugh endorses on his radio show. Cortislim, who had FTC letter about claims and Dr. Greg who has diploma mill degree. But I warn you. Get ready to laugh alot

edresearch.com

=================================================

rushlimbaugh.com

Zicam Works

December 7, 2004

Listen to Rush Conduct the Broadcast Excellence Transcribed Below...(audio)

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

Calm down in there, Mr. Snerdley! Snerdley is laughing and it's hard for me to maintain my composure. Oh, he's having a coughing spasm in there. I got rid of my cold. You know what I did to get rid of my cold? I knew I had a cold coming on yesterday, so I got some of that Zicam stuff. You ever heard of that folks, Zicam? Somebody alert the sales staff to turn on the radio and listen to this so they can get a client out there. I'm going to count down from ten so somebody can call the sales staff, well, they're out busy selling. Ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, one. All right, ten seconds, hopefully a member of the sales staff is listening. Zicam, it looks like the end of a one-ended Q-Tip, a cotton swab, and what you do is massage the inside of both nostrils with the cotton swab that has the gook on it that has the magic in it. It's zinc-based, that's why it's called Zicam. What you do is you rub it in there, and then you hold your nose after do you that on both sides. Hold your nose for ten seconds, you can talk, you can do anything you want, but you just have to hold your nose for ten seconds and then voila you're supposed to have the zinc in your system that's supposed to attack the evil common cold virus.

Well yesterday I had this little tickle in my throat which was causing some of you to think I sounded like I was choking, and it felt like it. I mean, all of a sudden I choked up and couldn't speak, had to cough. I put some of that in yesterday afternoon. I'd given Snerdley my last two because he's had a cold for like two years, but I asked him for one back and I put it in there and I feel a hundred percent. I'm not making this up. I know the story sounds like it's less than serious, but I'm being dead serious and this is the second time in the past three months I've tried this stuff, and it works. If you do it early enough. Now, I don't think it will get rid of Snerdley's two-year cold. You're supposed to use at the first sign that you think you're coming down with a cold. Don't be a hypochondriac about it, because you don't want to run around constantly swabbing the inside of your nose; people will talk. But -- (laughing) -- it works, I'm telling you, first time you put it up there it works. See, it has for me. Zicam, the official cold remedy of the EIB Network. All right, now, somebody in the sales staff could record that, take it to the media buyer and, bam, we got a new client. That's how business works. I combine business and content in the same masterful presentation.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Let's go to Monroe, Michigan, and Laurie. Hi, Laurie, welcome to the EIB Network. CALLER: Hi, Rush!

RUSH: Hi.

CALLER: I'm a health care professional, I'm a registered nurse.

RUSH: Yes.

CALLER: And I do want to let you know that use Zicam with caution. There are people who abuse Zicam and they permanently lost their sense of smell with it. And they haven't pulled it off the shelves --

RUSH: How much, whoa, whoa, whoa, wait a second.

CALLER: Yes.

RUSH: Pull it off the shelves, they can't do that.

CALLER: Well, I know, they haven't done that yet, and they are looking into these cases --

RUSH: How many people, and how often did they use the stuff?

CALLER: Well, that's what they're looking into. But the people that I've read about have used it according to the directions on the packaging, so you want to use it with caution, because we don't know if some of these people had extra sensitivities, we don't know really the case, but --

RUSH: Oh, man, you know --

CALLER: -- be real careful with it.

RUSH: Isn't it just the way this is --

CALLER: I know.

RUSH: -- they finally come away with something that works on the common cold and they're going to pull it off the market. I can't believe this.

CALLER: I think they really don't want to pull this off the market. Zicam is saying --

RUSH: Yes, they do. Yes, they do. They don't want anything on the market that works. All they want is stuff on the market that they've got to pull off because it kills you.

CALLER: Well, the people who produce Zicam say that the permanent loss of smell is not related to the Zicam, but the doctors who have seen these patients are saying there's got to be some kind of link to it. So just use it with caution. We love you here in South Rockwood, Michigan, and we don't want you to lose your smell.

RUSH: Thank you -- (laughing) -- my sense of smell.

CALLER: That's right.

RUSH: Yeah.

CALLER: Your smell, too.

RUSH: Thank you, Laurie, I appreciate it. I love you for that, appreciate that, thanks so much. Folks, these alarmist claims out there, anything you buy over-the-counter, have you taken out the warning packet that's in there and read the possible side effects of what can happen when you take a Dristan? It's everything from heart palpitations to cold sweat to nausea to diarrhea to hospitalizations. It's incredible, all these liability warnings out there. There's nothing I think you can buy over the counter that doesn't have this long list of potential maladies that could befall you if you take this particular product. Sense of smell, I haven't heard this by Zicam, but we'll look into it. Let me ask you, how many of you people would give up your sense of smell if you never got a cold again? Well, okay, if you couldn't taste then you'd lose weight. You have to look at these things positively. There's a win-win in practically everything that can happen to you out there. All right. I appreciate, Laurie, our medical report today, registered nurse from Monroe, Michigan.

END TRANSCRIPT

============================================

"And it's not easy to take the company's claims for safety of the product at face value when the man who claims to have developed the product, one Robert S. Davidson, parts his name in the middle (as in R. Steven Davidson) and boasts a Ph.D. in "biopharmacuetical project management" from the so-called American University of Asturias, a Spanish-based diploma mill "university" that was shut down by the Spanish government after being caught issuing what purported to be advanced degrees in almost anything, to anyone whose checks didn't bounce. "

COLD-EEZE SQUEEZE

By CHRISTOPHER BYRON

November 8, 2004 -- Remember when all of a sudden there wasn't enough flu vaccine to go around, and the subject somehow came up in one of the Presidential debates? And remember when George Bush said, in so many words, "Look, it's simple, just don't get a flu shot this year..."?

Well, out here at Curmudgeonly Arms, where the baleful moan of the cold north wind sweeps over the moors from November to May sending the body count of its victims soaring, the Curmudgeonlies stood brave, tall and true, for we figured, No flu vaccine? No problem!

That is because we Curmudgeonlies have long known the secret to a winter free of the wheezing and sneezing that afflicts the rest of humankind when the cruel winds blow.

Our secret is, of course, Cold-eeze throat lozenges, which a person may purchase at any reputable pharmacy (or indeed 7-Eleven), for $5.00 at retail give or take ? which is to say, for roughly half the price of a standup pepperoni-and-cheese pie at Ray's Famous Pizza.

So imagine our consternation upon learning, from a wanderer through the wintry gloom, that Cold-eeze ? when spritzed into the nose as a nasal aerosol instead of taken orally as a lozenge ? might not actually kill you but can apparently destroy your sense of smell.

What's that? Cold-eeze nasal spray, a health menace?

Yes, verily it is so ? at least if one is to judge from a lawsuit that was filed last week in Bucks County, Penn.

As reported by our informant, his words broken by the staccato of his hacking and consumptive cough, eight different consumer plaintiffs in the suit say they used Cold-eeze nasal spray and now wouldn't be able to smell Osama bin Laden if he were standing right next to them.

Fortunately, the honest tradesmen at Quigley Corp., producers of Cold-eeze, had already begun heading for the nasal spray exit door when the lawsuit hit.

They had informed their distributors in mid-September that the company had decided to drop the nasal spray product line because consumer demand for it hadn't developed as expected.

THIS was followed in due course by last week's lawsuit, and quicker than you could say "Anybody got a Kleenex?" the company response had hit the PR newswires, asserting that even a "cursory look" at the suit had been enough to convince Quigley brass that the complaint was "frivolous and without merit," and that the company intends to defend itself "vigorously" because the only thing Cold-eeze destroys is germs.

Being of an odd and suspicious sort, it thus took no time at all before our shingle-wracked manservant, Igor, could be observed struggling up the twisting stairway to my writer's garret at the top of the north tower.

Presenting himself breathless at the doorway, and with his hunchback blocking further progress, he declared: "Here, sire, take a whiff of these...!" and placed upon the floor before me a folio of Quigley Corp. documents.

He had arranged them for ex-Clinton national security affairs advisor Sandy Berger to filch from the files of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Then cackling in his special way, he departed, maneuvering his hunchback down the darkened staircase and across the courtyard to his abode in the corn crib, his parting words still ringing hauntingly, and mysteriously, in my ears: "Beware the ides of evil, sire, when darkness exhalts the moor."

The documents that Igor left behind for my perusal do give one pause, for they show that lawsuits by customers claiming damages from the use of Cold-eeze nasal spray had been accumulating against Quigley since as early as February of this year, when a Connecticut woman named Paige D. Davidson claimed using Cold-eeze nasal spray destroyed her sense of smell and that she'd never gotten it back.

Then in September, a Minnesota couple ? Sheryl and Howard Polski ? claimed the same thing, asserting that they too used had some Cold-eeze nasal spray, in December 2003, and that their colds had gone away but so had their senses of smell and taste, never to return.

In fact, even as lawyers for the Polskis were preparing their complaint, Quigley's brass were informing the company's distributors that they were dropping the nasal spray form of Cold-eeze from Quigley's product list. A month later, on Oct. 13, the company filed a Form 8K report at the SEC, making the news public to everyone.

QUIGLEY'S strategy for waving away these claims with words like "frivolous" and "without merit" seems to rest heavily on the assertion that Cold-eeze nasal spray was exhaustively safety-tested in what last week's press release from the company described as a "double-blind, placebo-controlled study" prior to introducing it to the market in September 2003.

But Igor's documents showed that references to double- blind placebo-controlled studies have appeared nearly two dozen times in Quigley's SEC filings over the last seven years, and the references have nothing to do with the nasal spray form of the treatment.

Instead, the references all involve one or the other of two early 1990s studies that purported to test the efficacy of the key ingredient in Cold- eeze ? so-called zinc gluconate ? when consumed in lozenge form as a means of treating the common cold.

In fact, it would appear that Quigley would never have become involved in the marketing of a zinc-based nasal spray had it not been for the apparent success a rival company called Matrixx Initiatives Inc. had been having with its own zinc- based nasal spray, which it called Zicam, and had begun marketing in late 1999.

But by the time Quigley announced in February 2003 that it was going to be bringing its own version of a zinc-based nasal spray to market later that year, Matrixx Initiatives was already hip-deep in lawsuits from nearly 100 customers who claimed that they'd used Zicam and lost their sense of smell.

Those claimants now top 175 and are continuing to grow.

And it's not easy to take the company's claims for safety of the product at face value when the man who claims to have developed the product, one Robert S. Davidson, parts his name in the middle (as in R. Steven Davidson) and boasts a Ph.D. in "biopharmacuetical project management" from the so-called American University of Asturias, a Spanish-based diploma mill "university" that was shut down by the Spanish government after being caught issuing what purported to be advanced degrees in almost anything, to anyone whose checks didn't bounce.

Requests for an interview with Davidson were fielded at his California office by a cagey fellow who identified himself simply as "Dave," and promised to get the request to Davidson.

At press-time neither man had returned the call.

* Please send e-mail to: cbyron@nypost.com



To: Skywatcher who wrote (75345)4/11/2006 3:27:55 PM
From: StockDungRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
The Men Behind ZICAM

washingtonpost.com
Tuesday, January 31, 2006; Page HE05

Like other scientific entrepreneurs, Robert Steven DAVIDSON thought zinc might be a promising treatment for the common cold. But unlike many inventors of drugs, DAVIDSON and his colleague Charles B. HENSLEY, who hold patents on ZICAM, have unusual backgrounds.

DAVIDSON received a bachelor's degree in 2004 from a "virtual" university, Excelsior College in Albany, N.Y. He lists himself as a PhD, a degree he obtained from an unaccredited and now-defunct university in Spain.

His colleague and co-inventor HENSLEY holds a doctorate in physiology from the University of Southern California and is currently chief executive officer of PRB Pharmaceuticals based in Cypress, Calif. HENSLEY recently received a warning letter from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) about the sale over the Internet of an unapproved drug his company makes to treat bird flu. HENSLEY previously developed a weight-loss remedy that involves sniffing "specially developed aromas."

DAVIDSON, who has contributed articles to Men's Fitness magazine, says his doctorate in biopharmaceutical project management and his MBA in international finance were earned at the American University of Asturias in Asturias, Spain, in the late 1990s. The school was closed in 2000 for violations of Spanish law, records show, and is considered a diploma mill by American authorities.

DAVIDSON, who sold his interest in ZICAM several years ago when he left to start another biotech firm, said he was unaware of any problems with the school in Spain. It is unusual to earn a doctorate before a bachelor's degree, he said in an interview, but his advanced degrees are legitimate. "I did work, a research paper and a dissertation."

He declined to discuss whether any safety questions arose during ZICAM's development and testing.

DAVIDSON said he met HENSLEY years ago at Cleveland Chiropractic College in Los Angeles, where he was taking classes and HENSLEY was a professor.

On Nov. 23, the FDA sent HENSLEY a letter about Vira 38, an antiviral compound marketed on PRB's Web site as effective in treating influenza, bird flu and SARS. The regulatory agency told HENSLEY he was violating federal law by selling an unapproved drug and warned that he and his company could face further legal action including "seizure of illegal products."

HENSLEY did not respond to e-mails or telephone calls.

-- Sandra G. Boodman

washingtonpost.com



To: Skywatcher who wrote (75345)4/11/2006 4:18:49 PM
From: StockDungRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Rush Limbaugh used to endorse Cold-Eeze

"Howard Stern raves about Cold-Eeze on the air, as does
Rush LIMBAUGH-- it's about the only thing the two agree on."

Cold-Eeze History - 1999 Philadelphia Magazine

Philadelphia Magazine
> 3/3/99
>
> THE ZINC PANTHER STRIKES AGAIN
>
> Guy Quigley's Cold-Eeze
> lozenges have been shown to beat
> back the common cold (well, in some
> studies). So why is his stock trading
> at only five bucks?
>
> BY BILL GIFFORD
>
> When the fellow with the cure for the
> common cold showed up at his office seven
> years ago, Guy J. Quigley quite naturally blew
> him off. He'd heard the pitch before-- on a
> different morning, from a different guy, for a
> different but equally "miraculous" product. To
> this day, he's thankful that he did it politely.
>
> The graying, professorial-looking fellow across
> the desk from him was John Godfrey, a former
> organic chemist for Rorer. His alleged cold cure
> took the form of homemade zinc lozenges that
> tasted, Quigley remembers, "like a ball of
> sawdust." No matter how good you are, Quigley
> told himself, you can't sell this. But Godfrey
> persisted: He'd done a study that showed the
> lozenges worked, cutting back the severity and
> duration of common colds. Get it published,
> Quigley told him, and then we'll talk.
>
> Six months later, John Godfrey returned to the
> tiny Bucks County offices of the Quigley
> Corporation, which at the time consisted of Guy
> J. Quigley; his partner, Charles A. "Chuck"
> Phillips; and a couple of other employees.
> Quigley had forgotten him completely; he was
> too busy trying-- and failing-- to push an energy
> food for athletes to compete with PowerBar. The
> study is going to be published, Godfrey said,
> dumping a stack of papers on Quigley's desk.
> Call me when you've read this.
>
> Over the weekend, Quigley and Phillips waded
> through the pile of documents, pausing to look up
> arcane medical terms and becoming more and
> more excited. They weren't medical or scientific
> people-- they were marketing guys-- but it
> seemed the professor was right: The stuff cured
> the cold. The next week, Quigley drew up a
> makeshift contract (he couldn't afford a lawyer)
> for the rights to a product that tasted terrible and
> had only ever been manufactured in the Godfrey
> kitchen.
>
> The little zinc lozenges would forever change the
> market for cold remedies in the United States. In
> the 12 months ending last January 3rd,
> Americans bought $56 million worth of Quigley's
> Cold-Eeze, which sells for about four to six
> bucks for a bag of 18 and comes in menthol,
> cherry, citrus and lemon-- lime flavors. It's also
> available as a bubble gum, for children. Howard
> Stern raves about Cold-Eeze on the air, as does
> Rush LIMBAUGH-- it's about the only thing the two
> agree on.
>
> Cold-Eeze ranks ninth out of all nonprescription
> cough and cold products, competitive with
> Tylenol Cold and Theraflu Cold & Sinus. In the
> cough-drop category, it runs second only to
> Hall's-- an impressive achievement, given that in
> 1995 the Quigley Corporation sold barely
> $500,000 worth of Cold-Eeze, mostly by mail
> order.
>
> That was before a study at the respected
> Cleveland Clinic showed Cold-Eeze actually
> reduces the duration of common cold symptoms
> by more than 40 percent. Overnight, sales
> soared. "It was like a supernova," says Phillips.
> Now, Quigley's lozenge packets bear two words
> not found on any other popular cold remedy:
> clinically proven.
>
> Seriously debatable might be equally accurate,
> since a number of studies have shown zinc has
> no such effect. But thanks to a combination of
> weird science, media hype and word of mouth,
> Cold-Eeze is competing with the big boys. "We're
> a kind of renegade, a thorn in the side of some of
> these large institutions," Guy Quigley says. And
> while his success was long-awaited and
> hard-fought, the ensuing havoc calls to mind the
> old curse: May you get what you desire.
>
> If any representatives of Bristol-Myers
> Squibb or Warner-Lambert were to drop by the
> offices of the Quigley Corporation, in the
> basement of a church in Doylestown, they would
> probably die laughing. The waiting area of their
> competitor consists of a ratty love seat and an
> ottoman strewn with magazines. Visitors can help
> themselves from a display of Cold-Eeze and
> watch vice president Chuck Phillips, who earned
> about $1 million in salary and royalties last year,
> wrestle with the photocopier. Guy Quigley's
> office does have a window, as befits his position
> as chairman and CEO, commanding a view of a
> window well. The scene looks small potatoes
> indeed.
>
> In fact, it's almost amazing that the Quigley
> Corporation is still around. In the past two years,
> it has survived a Barron's hatchet job, a smear
> campaign by stock market short-sellers, some
> major production and distribution snafus, and a
> spate of contradictory studies that sent its stock
> spiraling skyward and then dripping back down
> like a nose-load of wet phlegm. Before that, it
> suffered through seven lean years in which it
> resorted to issuing stock to pay the bills. Now
> Quigley is selling a magic bullet for the common
> cold-- and its shares trade for five bucks? What's
> wrong with this picture?
>
> Guy Quigley wishes he knew. It's a mild January
> afternoon, two years to the day after 20/20
> devoted a lengthy segment to the common cold in
> which it declared Cold-Eeze the only product that
> did sufferers a bit of good. The week before the
> show aired, Quigley stock hit $37 a share,
> meaning Guy Quigley was worth, for a short
> time, somewhere in excess of $75 million.
>
> The day after the 20/20 report, however, a
> Barron's cover story asserted that some of the
> people involved in promoting Quigley stock were
> shady at best and mob-linked at worst. The stock
> fell to the teens. (The company's connections
> with those people were tenuous and have since
> been severed.) Then somebody put out a
> damaging press release, on fake Quigley
> letterhead, and it actually ran on the Bloomberg
> wires, whacking the stock down even farther.
> "Someone," Guy Quigley warned darkly at the
> time, "is bent on the destruction of this
> company."
>
> But none of that really bothers him today. "What
> I have a problem dealing with," the 57-year-old
> says in his faint Irish brogue, "is the analysts in
> the stock market. They've gotta be the worst.
> They don't think about the fact that before we
> entered the market, there was no such thing as
> Cold-Eeze. There was no such thing as the zinc
> lozenge common cold market. We created it."
> Quigley, by the way, owns some 3.8 million
> shares, representing 26 percent of his company's
> common stock. He also gets a 3.75 percent
> founder's royalty on gross sales.
>
> Quigley goes on: "If we had been allowed to
> evolve, from $1 million to $5 million to maybe
> $30 million, we'd probably have a 30-dollar
> stock." But in the world of late-'90s stock mania,
> the market is in love with companies like
> Amazon.com, and nobody is allowed to "evolve."
> If your buzz is hot, then so is your stock-- until
> the first faint whiff of bad news. There are no
> second acts on Wall Street.com.
>
> When a desperate John Godfrey walked into
> his office in 1991, Guy Quigley was at loose ends
> himself and due for a run of better luck.
>
> Born in Ireland to a show-business family-- Dad
> a concert violinist, Mom a London actress--
> Quigley dabbled in the family trades before
> concluding that the world really didn't need
> "another bad actor." He applied his dramatic
> skills to a career selling windows, which netted
> him a posh London flat and a Triumph sports
> car. Then he met a nice girl on Majorca and
> proposed to her after two weeks. It was a rare
> opportunity, he told her-- a true salesman's line,
> but she said yes. She happened to be the sole
> heiress to a 100,000-acre cattle ranch in Northern
> Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) that had been
> founded by her grandfather, an American from
> Oklahoma. Six months later, Quigley moved to
> Africa and got married, just in time for the wave
> of independence movements that swept the
> continent in the 1960s and '70s.
>
> He and his wife, Wendy, ran a smaller,
> 40,000-acre spread adjacent to the main ranch.
> Their life was straight from the movie Out of
> Africa, with a lot of flying around in bush planes,
> tea in the old colonial clubs and big-game hunting
> expeditions, but they'd come to it too late.
> Neighboring Zambia had already become
> independent, and Rhodesia was violently on its
> way to becoming Zimbabwe. In fact,
> Zimbabwean guerrillas had taken up residence on
> the ranch.
>
> For a while, Quigley had a side business selling
> the real estate of fleeing whites. After getting
> caught up in urban rioting for the second time,
> Quigley kept plane tickets to San Francisco for
> himself and his wife and kids, so they'd be able
> to escape if need be. They left Africa for England
> a couple of years later, and learned not long after
> that Wendy had been maneuvered out of her
> inheritance by a new stepmother. "We left behind
> millions of dollars," he says. "It's like a chapter,
> you know? You go-- boom!" He pantomimes
> closing a book.
>
> After Wendy concluded that she didn't much like
> the English, they closed yet another chapter,
> finally winding up in Doylestown, where the
> entrepreneurial Quigley began marketing so-called
> "resemblance perfumes"-- essentially copies of
> established brands. In the late 1980s, he switched
> to the budding energy-bar business with
> something called the GQ Alpha I bar, but that
> went nowhere.
>
> With almost zero earnings, Quigley was slowly
> going broke, draining the European bank
> accounts he'd loaded up with cattle profits. He
> had to sell both his Rolls-Royces, including a
> 1969 Corniche, to keep the business going.
> Wendy thrice talked him out of "throwing in the
> towel," he says. In 1996, he managed to sell $1
> million worth of Godfrey's zinc lozenges. The
> following year, sales topped $70 million.
>
> Quigley was not even remotely prepared for the
> Cold-Eeze "supernova." In the fall of 1996, as
> the company scrambled to increase production at
> its Lebanon, Pennsylvania, manufacturer, a
> terrible problem arose. The lozenge-making
> machinery lacked the metal dies that stamp a "Q"
> onto each oval disk. They came from Italy and
> were a couple of months late.
>
> Under FDA rules, the lozenges couldn't be sold
> without the identifying mark. As newspapers and
> TV shows touted the new miracle cold cure,
> there was almost no Cold-Eeze on the market.
> The company racked up $12 million in orders
> that it could't fill. Drugstores kept waiting lists;
> Internet sites alerted the faithful to shipments
> leaving the factory. Newscasts featured shots of
> empty shelves-- which sent the stocks soaring
> ever higher.
>
> The problems were finally sorted out in the
> spring of 1997, just in time for the end of cold
> season. Last winter was relatively mild,
> depressing sales further. Meanwhile, analysts
> expected a $100 million year, not realizing that
> $30 million worth of Cold-Eeze was already
> sitting on drugstore shelves. The Cold-Eeze
> shortage had turned into something even worse: a
> glut.
>
> Left untreated, the doctors' saying goes, a
> common cold will last at least a week--but modern
> medical science can get rid of it in as little as seven
> days. There's a very good reason why "modern
> medical science" can't cure the common cold:
> It's really not worthwhile to do so.
>
> What we call a "cold" can be caused by more
> than 200 different viruses, all of which are
> extremely difficult to isolate and target. Antiviral
> drugs are too powerful for such a minor ailment
> that resolves itself within a week anyway. On the
> other hand, almost everyone gets colds, so the
> market for a cold treatment is infinite.
>
> Zinc would seem an unlikely candidate. Other
> than zinc oxide, which anxious parents rub on
> their kids' noses at the beach, its medical
> applications are limited. In 1979, George Eby of
> Austin, Texas, was nursing his daughter through
> a case of leukemia that left her weak and
> susceptible to illness. Eby plied her with vitamins
> and minerals. One night, the story goes, she was
> coming down with a cold and was too weak to
> swallow a zinc pill, so she let it dissolve in her
> mouth. The next day, her cold was gone.
> (Today, she is a healthy 23-year-old college
> student.)
>
> Eby was curious. Although an urban planner by
> profession, he mounted a clinical trial of zinc
> gluconate as a cold treatment and managed to get
> the results published in a prestigious journal in
> 1984. That much-criticized study found that
> volunteers taking zinc overcame their colds 64
> percent quicker than those on placebos.
>
> To date, five scientific studies have shown that
> zinc helps shorten the duration of cold
> symptoms. Then again, six studies have found no
> such effect. The world of cold research is divided
> into pro- and anti-zinc camps. "There's always
> some fad for cold treatments," scoffs Dr. Jack
> Gwaltney of the University of Virginia, who
> conducted a negative study for Bristol-Myers
> Squibb in the 1980s. "It's the same as cancer."
> (Curiously, Gwaltney himself holds patents for a
> method of cold treatment by various agents,
> including "zinc salts.")
>
> How does zinc work-- if it works? There's no
> scientific consensus, but Godfrey believes zinc
> ions bond with cold virus particles, making them
> less likely to find a home in nasal mucus
> membranes. To work at all, the zinc has to be
> released in the mouth; hence, the lozenge is the
> best delivery vehicle.
>
> More than anyone else, perhaps, Godfrey is
> responsible for the zinc "fad." He noticed Eby's
> study and started playing around in his home
> laboratory, testing various recipes for zinc
> gluconate lozenges. (His bosses at Revlon
> Healthcare weren't interested in the project.)
> When his wife, Nancy, came down with a cold,
> he fed her some from an early batch. She taught
> him one drawback of zinc: In too-large doses, it's
> a powerful emetic. "I barfed my head off," she
> recalls.
>
> Even sweetened, zinc has a metallic taste. Most
> studies on zinc's efficacy employed typical candy
> sweeteners like sorbitol, mannitol and citric acid
> to mask the flavor. Godfrey postulated that the
> sweeteners might inactivate the zinc by binding
> up the ions.
>
> To test this theory, the Godfreys held a "party"
> that could only be described as bizarre: Guests
> were required to suck on zinc lozenges, then spit
> into paper cups. The Godfreys analyzed the
> collected spittle and found it contained no zinc;
> the sweeteners kept it from dissolving in saliva.
> John had to find a way to get people to keep the
> awful-tasting stuff in their mouths long enough
> for the zinc to be released there.
>
> After much grinding, stirring and mixing, Godfrey
> finally solved the taste problem with glycine, a
> basic amino acid responsible for the sweetness of
> certain meats. It wasn't great, but it didn't make
> anyone throw up. The Godfreys patented zinc
> gluconate glycine in 1987. Three years later, they
> mounted their first clinical trial, at Dartmouth
> College in frosty New Hampshire. Students
> taking zinc within a day of catching a cold
> experienced a 42 percent reduction in the severity
> of symptoms. A year later, Dartmouth students
> were still trooping to the clinic asking for "those
> grim cough drops."
>
> Yet the Godfreys had gotten nowhere with the
> pharmaceutical firms, who tended to flee when
> the couple demanded a "performance clause"-- a
> requirement that the company actually produce a
> zinc product and not shelve their idea. Nancy
> Godfrey believes the pharmaceutical companies
> were "not really interested in seeing a product get
> on the market," as that would threaten their $3
> billion business in cold palliatives-- stuff that
> relieves symptoms temporarily.
>
> There was another, personal obstacle: George
> Eby, the original prophet of zinc. Eby had
> patented the use of zinc as a cold treatment,
> while the Godfreys had rights to the only
> palatable zinc formula. Anyone who wanted to
> capitalize on the promise of zinc had to deal with
> them both. "They're like oil and water," says Guy
> Quigley, who finally managed to bring them
> together.
>
> He did it by keeping them apart. He offered the
> Godfreys a five percent royalty on their
> invention-- and set aside a similar amount for
> George Eby, if and when he sued. (He eventually
> did, and settled in 12 days, for a three percent
> royalty.) Every month, the Quigley Corporation
> mails out royalty checks to the Godfreys in
> Huntingdon Valley and George Eby in Austin,
> and everyone is more or less happy.
>
> Guy Quigley wanted further proof that zinc
> could work at a better-tasting lower dose, so he
> indirectly approached Dr. Michael Macknin, head
> of pediatrics at the Cleveland Clinic. Macknin
> was intrigued and agreed to do a study for free.
> He had already debunked one fanciful cold
> treatment-- an Israeli-made inhaler that dispersed
> heated water vapor into the nostrils-- and has said
> that he expected Cold-Eeze to fail as well.
>
> It didn't. In a double-blind study, Macknin found
> that Cold-Eeze reduced the duration of cold
> symptoms by 42 percent over a placebo, almost
> exactly duplicating Godfrey's results. The day the
> study came out, a CNN crew visited Macknin's
> clinic. He dutifully held up a box of Cold-Eeze on
> camera. "When we broke the code" and learned
> the results, he told 20/20, "I got chills."
>
> Three weeks later, a cold wind blew his way:
> The papers reported that Macknin owned a
> substantial amount of Quigley stock, which had
> shot from less than a dollar in July 1996 to more
> than $30 six months later-- riding the zinc craze
> his study had helped to ignite. That was
> embarrassing enough, although the clinic says the
> transaction had been cleared with its lawyers.
> Then, in September 1996, as Macknin was
> beginning a second study of Cold-Eeze in
> children, the Cleveland Clinic sent a draft royalty
> agreement to the Quigley Corporation, seeking a
> percentage of Cold-Eeze sales. Quigley says he
> rejected the idea as a blatant conflict of interest
> that would taint Cleveland's research. "Once that
> comes out, you've got no study, in my opinion,"
> he notes.
>
> A Cleveland Clinic spokesman says he can't
> recall who initiated royalty discussions, Cleveland
> or Quigley, but adds, "Such an agreement would
> never have survived institutional review. We
> don't do that." The document was generated, he
> explains, at a lower level of the organization.
> "Researchers should not have a vested interest in
> the outcome of their studies," says Penn
> bioethicist Arthur Caplan. However, he notes,
> money is "a driving force in biomedical research,"
> and such arrangements are by no means rare.
>
> To everyone's shock, this second study came out
> negative: Zinc had no effect on colds in children.
> Only then, Quigley says, did he realize the study
> hadn't been carried out properly: Many of the
> patients had asthma, bronchitis or allergies, and
> several were taking other medications. Under the
> agreed-on protocol, he argues, 83 of the 249
> study subjects should have been withdrawn from
> the analysis, leaving only those who suffered
> from bona fide common colds and had been
> properly treated with zinc alone. (In fact, the first
> study had included anyone with cold symptoms.)
>
> A spokesman for the Cleveland Clinic counters
> that Quigley sought to change the protocol after
> the study was underway. The disagreement led to
> a showdown in Pittsburgh between Quigley
> Corporation lawyers and Cleveland Clinic
> lawyers that Quigley lost: The study was
> published in JAMA on June 24th, sending the
> stock plummeting.
>
> "We know it works," Guy Quigley huffs. And
> with two positive studies in the bank, he can keep
> labeling Cold-Eeze "clinically proven."
>
> The company is conducting a full-fledged trial in
> the United Kingdom, where it must show zinc's
> effectiveness before marketing Cold-Eeze as a
> cold remedy. UK approval would in turn open
> the rest of the damp, dismal European market to
> Cold-Eeze-- and boost the product's credibility
> substantially.
>
> An independent study of zinc lozenges has
> recently been completed at the Medical
> University of South Carolina. The results haven't
> yet been published, but will they even matter?
> The zinc craze has hardly slowed down in more
> than two years; rather, Cold-Eeze and its
> imitators, as well as echinacea and a pack of
> other "alternative" remedies, seem to be
> supplanting conventional treatments.
>
> "People try all sorts of things," says Dr. Ron
> Turner, a professor at the Medical University of
> South Carolina, "and with the common cold, it's
> easy to convince yourself that you're seeing an
> effect."
>
> Even with the bad publicity, Cold-Eeze sales
> have held steady from last winter to this winter.
> "This is really our cornerstone," Guy Quigley
> says. "I consider this our first year. We're going
> to build from our sales this year to next year, to
> the next year."
>
> Yet Quigley stock drifts ever downward, a
> fraction of a point at a time, stubbornly refusing
> to rise even after the company established an
> on-line sales site in January.
>
> This winter, in an effort to diversify, the Quigley
> Corporation rolled out its latest product, a
> weight-loss lozenge called Bodymate. Its active
> ingredient, derived from Indian tamarinds, is
> already used in several diet aids; it is supposed to
> keep the body from turning food energy into fat.
> It also has one thing in common with the zinc
> gluconate used in Cold-Eeze: According to a
> study published recently in JAMA (which the
> company disputes), it doesn't work.

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