I have a cold. I gargled with salt water. I guess it made me feel better and my sore throat did go away the next day, but now I am suffering from other symptoms. Most colds are caused by rhinoviruses which grow best inside humans’ noses because the temperature is just right (around 91°F). The NIH says that adults have on average 2 to 4 colds per year although, of course, the range really fluctuates a lot from person to person. Most colds won’t last more than a week in patients with healthy immune systems. So if all goes well I should be better by Friday!
I found out something really interesting yesterday: Dr. Leonard Seymour and other researchers at
Here’s a link to a review article from the researchers at
News article about Dr. Seymour’s research:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/story/0,,1987505,00.html
NIH Information about colds: http://www3.niaid.nih.gov/healthscience/healthtopics/colds/default.htm
2 comments:
This sounds really interesting. Who would have thought the common cold would be used to fight cancer! I am curious about this treatment and I will try to read all the information you posted soon, but here are my initial thoughts. I'm curious about how this will work. My biggest question is how the cold virus is destroyed once it attacks the cancer cells? It seems like researchers might be developing a "super-cold" that could come back to haunt us later. Also, how does the virus know which cells to destroy?
From what I read, my understanding is that the amount of virus injected is relatively small (not enough to actually give you a cold). So when it reaches the tumor it replicates easily and quickly in the locally weakened immune system but as soon as the virus moves to other parts of the body it will be rapidly destroyed.
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