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August 15, 2000
Contact: Jennifer Day (313) 577-1058, jday@med.wayne.edu
WSU study shows zinc lozenges shorten colds
Research
published in Annals of Internal Medicine shows symptoms linger 4.5 days for
those using zinc vs. 8.1 days for those who didn’t
Zinc lozenges reduces the length of time cold sufferers have to endure sore
throats, runny noses, sneezing, coughing and fever, according to a study
published in the Annals of Internal Medicine by Wayne State University School of
Medicine Professor Ananda Prasad.
Forty-eight patients who had colds participated in a random, double-blind
study in which about half were give zinc lozenges while the other half received
placebos to take every two to three hours while awake. Compared with the placebo
group, the zinc group had shorter overall duration of cold symptoms – 4.5 days
vs. 8.1 days. The lozenges particularly seemed to aid reducing coughing.
Dr. Prasad, a professor of
hematology-oncology, is considered a world authority on zinc deficiency and its
manifestations regarding human health. In 1963, while working to establish a
university in Iran, Dr. Prasad met a 21-year-old man who looked like a
10-year-old. The man’s symptoms, which included severe anemia, low iron and
growth retardation, proved to be widespread. Commonly, people affected by the
syndrome would die of pneumonia or parasitic diseases.
Although Dr. Prasad suspected these
people had iron deficiencies due to poor diet, he wondered whether another metal
deficiency would account for the growth retardation. He found it, and it was
zinc. Studies already had shown that rabbits and mice lacking zinc experienced
stunted growth. During the course of the 1960s, Dr. Prasad produced several
studies, some of them now considered classic in the nutritional medicine field,
showing that zinc supplements could counteract the syndrome.
He
ended up proving that, at a cellular level, zinc is necessary to T cells, which
battle all kinds of infection. Without zinc, the T cells don’t function
effectively, allowing potentially anything from the common cold to cancer invade
the body. Dr. Prasad believes zinc and iron deficiencies occur in more than a
billion people worldwide; one of Dr. Prasad’s studies has shown one in four
Detroiters to be zinc deficient.
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