Vitamin
C Can't Cure Common Cold
Tiny
Cold-Shortening Effect Not Worth Yearlong Dosing
By
Daniel J. DeNoon
Reviewed
by Brunilda Nazario, MD
July 17, 2007 -- Vitamin C can't cure common colds -- and, for most
people, it can't do much to prevent them.
That's
the word from a brand new review of some 60 years of clinical research
by Robert M. Douglas, MD, emeritus professor at Australian National
University, Canberra, and colleagues.
Vitamin
C affects resistance to viruses in lab animals. That's led to decades
of speculation that vitamin C supplements could be used to treat or to
prevent the common cold.
It's
also led to a large number of clinical trials, which tested a wide
range of vitamin C doses in a wide range of people. In a prestigious
Cochrane Review, Douglas and colleagues used widely accepted techniques
for analyzing all these studies.
Their findings:
When taken after a cold
starts, vitamin C supplements do not make a cold shorter or less severe.
When
taken as a daily preventive medicine, vitamin C very slightly shortens
cold duration -- by 8% in adults and by 13.6% in children.
When
given as a preventive medicine to highly fit people in conditions of
extreme cold -- data based mostly on marathon runners -- vitamin C cuts
the risk of getting a cold in half.
The
average adult who suffers with colds for 12 days a year would still
suffer for 11 days a year if that person took a high dose of vitamin C
every day.
"It
would not seem reasonable to ingest vitamin C regularly in the
mega-dose range throughout the year if the only anticipated benefit is
to rather slightly shorten the duration of colds, which occur for
adults only two or three times a year," Douglas and colleagues suggest.
For
the average child who suffers about 28 days of cold illness a year,
taking daily high-dose vitamin C would still mean 24 days of cold
illness.
"Such a benefit is not
trivial but is it worth the cost of long-term prophylaxis?" Douglas and
colleagues ask.
The
only strong effect of vitamin C was in preventing colds among people
engaged in extreme physical exercise in extremely cold conditions.
"Caution
should be exercised in generalizing this finding that is mainly based
on marathon runners," Douglas and colleagues caution.
A better way to prevent
the common cold: regular and careful hand washing, especially during
cold season.
Douglas and colleagues
report their findings in The Cochrane Collaboration.
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