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Zicam & Airborne
Claims, Benefits: Prevents
or cures the common cold.
Bottom Line: Neither supplement
has much in the way of solid science to back it up. And both may have
a downside.
Full Article, Wellness Letter, September 2005:
Cold Comfort Two new cold remedies have come
on the market, and others will be launched this fall, no doubt. The two
newcomers are Zicam, a nasal pump containing
zinc, and Airborne, an effervescent tablet with a whole catalog of
ingredients. Both are big sellers. And both may have a downside. Zinc
in the nose Zicam, sold as a homeopathic product, contains
zinc gluconate in gel form. A homeopathic remedy should, in theory, have
only an undetectable
trace of zinc, but Zicam really does contain some. There’s a theoretical
basis for why zinc might reduce cold symptoms and duration, but the research
has been inconclusive. You can get Zicam in a nasal pump or swab. The
idea is to begin using it at the first cold symptom, and continue every
four hours until symptoms subside. It claims to reduce the duration of
a cold. Indeed, a study from the Cleveland Clinic Foundation of healthy
young people found that the product reduced cold duration from six days
to four. Others studies have had less decisive results. One, in the American
Journal of Medicine in 2001, found no benefit. Here’s the problem: The
FDA is examining reports that the product causes anosmia—loss
of smell. There are lawsuits pending. There is some evidence that applying
zinc in the nose can, in rare cases, damage
the sense of smell, possibly permanently. Is it worth the risk, just
to reduce the duration of a cold by a couple of days? We say no. Airborne
chemistry Airborne, concocted and marketed by a teacher
and touted on the Oprah show, is a tablet you dissolve in water (like
Alka-Seltzer).
The adult
formulation contains high doses of vitamin A (5,000 IU) and vitamin C
(1,000 milligrams), as well as vitamin E, magnesium, zinc, selenium,
and a bouquet of Chinese herbs, including Chinese vitex, isatis root,
and others, plus the more familiar-sounding echinacea, ginger, forsythia,
and honeysuckle. You’re supposed to take the product every three
hours at the first sign of a cold, so you could get very large doses
of vitamins and minerals. High doses of A are dangerous for pregnant
women, and over the long term could increase the risk of osteoporosis.
The safe upper limit is only 10,000 IU—that’s just two Airborne
tablets. There is no truth to the idea that high doses of vitamin C or
other vitamins, and in particular vitamin A, will prevent a cold or alleviate
symptoms—and no credible evidence that any of these other ingredients
(except possibly zinc) would be useful in any way. No one knows what the
side effects of the herbs might be—Chinese
vitex, for instance, has been linked to increases in blood pressure.
Surely, with Airborne’s huge sales, the company could afford to
sponsor some solid research. It claims that one study has been done,
but has not released the results—and no journal has published it. Should
you be a guinea pig for Airborne? Again, we say no. There’s
no reason to think it’s safe or effective. UC Berkeley Wellness
Letter, September 2005

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