With over 200 viruses that can its symptoms, the common cold is a primary source of absenteeism from work and school, and a major cause of doctor’s visits. Whereas Vitamin C gained much popularity from research by Nobel laureate Linus Pauling in the 1970s, data varies as to whether it can prevent and/or treat the common cold. Hemila Harri, from the University of Helsinki (Finland), and colleagues completed a meta-analysis of 29 clinical trials enrolling 11,306 subjects that involved Vitamin C and the common cold. The team found that Vitamin C seems to be particularly beneficial for people under heavy physical stress. In five randomized trials of participants with heavy short-term physical stress, vitamin C halved the incidence of the common cold. Further, in a recent randomized trial carried out with adolescent competitive swimmers, vitamin C halved the duration of colds in males (but had no effect among female subjects). Regular doses of vitamin C of one gram per day or higher have reduced the average duration of colds in adults by 8% and in children by 18%. Writing that: “vitamin C may be useful for people exposed to brief periods of severe physical exercise,” the study authors submit that: “[due to its] low cost and safety, it may be worthwhile for common cold patients to test on an individual basis whether therapeutic vitamin C is beneficial for them.”
Vitamin C May Help Reduce Incidence of Common Cold
Hemila Harri, Chalker Elizabeth. “Vitamin C for preventing and treating the common cold.” Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2013 No. 1, 31 Jan. 2013.
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