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Zinc's Cold-Curing Power
(HealthScoutNews) -- Sniffling again?
Perhaps you should try zinc supplements,
which have been shown in certain trials to cut the duration of
a cold in half. Some researchers have even heralded the element
as the long-sought "silver bullet" for treating the
common cold.
However, does it actually work?
"It depends on who you ask,"
says Dr. Sherif Mossad of the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. "The
weight of the data is equal in both directions."
Over the past decade, about 14
studies have been done on the mineral's cold-curing power. According
to Mossad, half have shown that it works and half that it doesn't.
"I don't think the pendulum
is going one way or the other at this time," he says. "Every
year, one or two studies come out because the cold is such a common
problem."
An estimated 62 million people
develop colds in the United States annually, according to the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Children have about six to eight
colds a year. In families with children in school, the number
of colds per child can be as high as 12 a year.
Adults average two to four colds
a year. And women, especially those 20 to 30 years of age, have
more colds than men, possibly because of their closer contact
with children, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases says.
While health authorities know a
lot about who gets colds and how frequently, it's much more difficult
to nail down the strain of cold and its symptoms.
Colds are caused by viruses, and
researchers estimate that about 200 of them circulate during the
cold season, which runs from November to April. So determining
the type of cold a person has and what it will do is nearly impossible,
Mossad says.
Another limiting factor to studying
the common cold is the wide variety of symptoms associated with
it, and the subjective evaluation of them. When scientists analyze
the effectiveness of a cold treatment, they depend on patients'
reports about how they feel, which can alter results from study
to study.
"With this illness, you have
mainly subjective responses to the medicine. It's not like you
give a person a blood test and you can see a change," Mossad
says.
All that said, however, zinc appears
to be one of the most effective cold treatments available. The
element is usually taken as a lozenge or nasal spray. Scientists
believe it works by either preventing virus cells from reproducing
or coating them so they can't take effect in the body.
Six years ago, Mossad conducted
a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of zinc's
ability to cure the cold in 100 adults. The patients who received
zinc lozenges six or eight times a day felt relief nearly twice
as fast as those using a placebo lozenge. They saw their symptoms
disappear after an average of 4.4 days, compared to 7.6 days for
the placebo group. The difference was most apparent with coughing
and sore throat.
Mossad's best evidence, though,
may be the element's work on his own stuffy head.
"Personally, I use it when
I have a cold and I seem to get better quicker," he says.
Other studies, however, cast doubts.
Four years ago, a prominent trial
of school children showed that zinc did little to assuage their
symptoms. Researchers reported in the Journal of the American
Medical Association that they tested 250 children outside
Cleveland, and found that both those taking zinc lozenges and
those taking a placebo suffered symptoms for an average of nine
days.
Moreover a "meta-study"
in the Journal of Nutrition two years ago, which evaluated
11 studies, found that zinc's effectiveness in curing the cold
still hasn't been proven. Many of the positive studies suffered
methodological failings, such as using an ineffective placebo
lozenge, researchers say.
However, the studies concluding
zinc doesn't work also suffer from problems, says Dr. Ananda Prasad,
a professor of medicine at Wayne State University in Detroit.
They failed, he argues, because scientists used lozenges that
included elements besides zinc, because they used doses that were
too small, or because they started treatment more than 24 hours
after the cold began.
"It is really very disturbing.
This is not fair for the public," he says. "Most of
the confusion is that people have been using the wrong preparations
of zinc. Many don't work."
Prasad recommends that people use
simple zinc lozenges without added ingredients or flavorings.
Even though such lozenges have a poor taste and can cause nausea
on an empty stomach, they work much better, he says. His study
in 2000 also showed that zinc cut the duration of a cold in half.
"I have no question in my
mind that zinc works. We have used it a lot here at the medical
center. But we always use the right kind, so it works," he
says.
For the lozenges to work, they
should be taken every two or three hours, in 12 milligram to 13
milligram doses, he says.
Since too much zinc can reduce
the copper level in the body, hurting immune response, people
shouldn't take high doses of the element for longer than four
days, Prasad says.
What To Do
For more information about the
cold virus, visit the Common
Cold Centre, run by Cardiff University in South East Wales,
Britain. Or read more about the cold at the National
Library of Medicine.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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