PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New: Cutting-edge natural bioactive molecules effectively reduce cold symptoms

2023-08-15
(Press-News.org) New York, August 10, 2023 – Researchers at Applied Biological Laboratories Inc. discovered how natural bioactive molecules can effectively relieve cold and flu symptoms by protecting the mucosal barrier function and reducing inflammation during these infections. Together, they call these molecules, which include lysozyme and lactoferrin, the “Mucosal Immune Complex.”

The research, led by Nazlie Sadeghi-Latefi, PhD, highlights the importance of supporting mucosal barrier immunity to prevent and treat colds and flu. This work will be presented at the American Chemical Society Fall 2023 Meeting on August 15, 2023.

Mucosal immunity is the body's first line of defense against invading pathogens, such as those causing the common cold and influenza. While the mucosal barrier functions primarily as a part of the innate immune response, it provides a crucial bridge to adaptive immunity. Once someone is infected, the mucosal immunity and barrier integrity determine the extent of the infection, and thus the illness severity and duration.

Popular cold & flu remedies may do more harm than good

A previous peer reviewed study by researchers at Applied Biological Laboratories compared the effects of natural bioactive molecules to those of the most popular over-the-counter cough and cold medications using in vitro respiratory mucosal barrier models. The researchers found that these popular OTC medications damage the mucosal barrier and increase inflammation (the underlying cause of cold symptoms), which they say may translate to possibly worsening symptoms, prolonging infections, and increasing the risk of secondary infections.

Smith Johnston, MD, clinical faculty at the University of Texas Medical Branch, former Medical Officer emeritus for NASA’s Medical Operations Branch, and a member of Applied Biological Laboratories’ scientific advisory board adds that decades of meta-analyses of clinical trials have found inconclusive evidence of safety and effectiveness for many popular over-the-counter common cold and flu medications. Although these medications often claim to provide the indicated symptomatic relief, they have not been shown to effectively reduce the severity and duration of illness better than placebo. Many of these were approved for over-the-counter (monograph) marketing before the FDA required rigorous clinical trials to approve over-the-counter drugs.

Lysozyme and Lactoferrin strengthen mucosal barrier immunity, block viral entry, and synergize with more specific COX inhibitors

One of the key inflammatory signals in respiratory inflammation and cold symptoms involves prostaglandin generation via COX enzymes. When low doses of plant-based acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin), or other naturally derived COX inhibitors such as aloe vera extract were combined with lysozyme, lactoferrin, and menthol the anti-inflammatory effects through inhibition of COX-mediated inflammation and bradykinin-mediated IL-8 were even greater than with the COX inhibitor alone. Thus, this combination of natural bioactive molecules has powerful synergistic effects for relieving cold and flu symptoms.

Unlike common OTC cold & flu remedies, which do not focus on inflammation at all, and which may damage the mucosal barrier, specific concentrations of natural bioactive ingredients like lactoferrin and lysozyme did not damage the mucosal barriers but strengthened it according to the previously mentioned peer reviewed study. According to numerous other peer reviewed studies, lactoferrin and lysozyme activate local innate immune cells, such as macrophages and dendritic cells and may also bind to viruses, preventing them from docking and infecting respiratory epithelial cells.

Clinical trial confirms the synergistic benefits of natural bioactive molecules with low-dose aspirin in treating cold & flu symptoms

To confirm their findings and test their formulations clinically, researchers at Applied Biological Laboratories conducted a randomized, double-blind placebo controlled multi-center study. Relief of sore throat, a measure of upper respiratory inflammation was assessed as the primary endpoint and reduction of other common cold symptoms such as nasal discharge and congestion, sneezing, sore/scratchy throat, cough, headache, malaise, and fever/chills, as assessed by the modified Jackson scores were measured as secondary endpoints. The trial assessed 179 participants who were randomly assigned to either placebo or one of three treatment groups each containing the mucosal immune complex and a mix of other anti-inflammatory ingredients.

By the second day of the study, the treatment groups had a significant reduction of up to 4.59 points in modified Jackson scores, whereas the placebo group did not demonstrate any improvement in any category of Jackson scores. The researchers conclude that formulas containing the mucosal immune complex are an effective treatment for alleviating cold and flu symptoms, including nasal congestion, discharge, sneezing, sore throat, cough, headache, malaise, and fever/chills.

Implications and Impact

The potential implications of these results are significant, given the vast number of people affected by the common cold and flu every season. Every year, an average household shops for over-the-counter medications 26 times a year, spending an average of $338. To date, few studies have evaluated the impact of these medications on mucosal barrier integrity, which can affect symptom severity and susceptibility to secondary infections. In addition, clinical evidence that demonstrates the safety and effectiveness of cold and flu remedies has been scarce, even in FDA-approved medications.

Conclusion and Contact Information

Applied Biological Laboratories Inc is a New York biotechnology company committed to researching, developing, manufacturing, and distributing scientifically validated natural products that strengthen the body's innate defenses. Biovanta is an OTC cold and flu remedy based upon research findings at Applied Biological Laboratories Inc, currently available at 28,000 pharmacies nationwide.

For further information about Biovanta and ongoing research, please contact Applied Biological Labs based at 760 Parkside Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11226 and krischall@appliedbioinc.com.

References:

Leyva-Grado, V., Pugach, P., & Sadeghi-Latefi, N. (2021). A novel anti-inflammatory treatment for bradykinin-induced sore throat or pharyngitis. Immunity, Inflammation and Disease, 9(4), 1321–1335. https://doi.org/10.1002/iid3.479 Common colds: Overview. (2020). Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG). https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK279543/ Ell, K. (2017). 7 ways to meet the costs of cold and flu season. USA Today. https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/personalfinance/2017/10/17/7-ways-meet-costs-cold-and-flu-season/740719001/ END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Benefits of electric stoves on health and environment in Ecuador

2023-08-15
One of the most popular strategies to increase energy efficiency and reduce pollution in homes — which are responsible for approximately 10 percent of greenhouse gas emissions — is the transitioning from gas to electric stoves. An international team of researchers investigated the health and environmental impacts of a program in Ecuador that put induction stoves in 750,000 households. In the Aug. 15, 2023 online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers report that both greenhouse gas emissions ...

Novel hardware approach offers new quantum-computing paradigm

2023-08-15
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Aug. 15, 2023 — A potentially game-changing theoretical approach to quantum computing hardware avoids much of the problematic complexity found in current quantum computers. The strategy implements an algorithm in natural quantum interactions to process a variety of real-world problems faster than classical computers or conventional gate-based quantum computers can. “Our finding eliminates many challenging requirements for quantum hardware,” said Nikolai Sinitsyn, a theoretical physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory. He is coauthor of a paper on the approach in the journal Physical Review A. “Natural systems, such as the electronic ...

New online course equips personal care assistants with essential knowledge for supporting individuals with spinal cord injury

New online course equips personal care assistants with essential knowledge for supporting individuals with spinal cord injury
2023-08-15
East Hanover, NJ – August 15, 2023 –  "Understanding Spinal Cord Injury: A Course for Personal Care Assistants" a new interactive online course designed to enhance the training of personal care assistants (PCAs) for individuals with spinal cord injury, was presented today at the Paralyzed Veterans of America Healthcare (PVA) Summit + Expo at the Renaissance Orlando at SeaWorld Hotel in Orlando, FL, by Jeanne Zanca, MPT, PhD, FACRM, assistant director of the Center for Spinal Cord Injury Research at Kessler Foundation, and chair of the Foundation’s Institutional Review ...

Classic rock music can be recreated from recorded brain activity

Classic rock music can be recreated from recorded brain activity
2023-08-15
Researchers led by Ludovic Bellier at the University of California, Berkeley, US, demonstrate that recognizable versions of classic Pink Floyd rock music can be reconstructed from brain activity that was recorded while patients listened to the song. Published August 15th in the open access journal PLOS Biology, the study used nonlinear modeling to decode brain activity and reconstruct the song, “Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1”. Encoding models revealed a new cortical subregion in the temporal lobe that underlies rhythm perception, which could be exploited ...

Brain recordings capture musicality of speech — with help from Pink Floyd

Brain recordings capture musicality of speech — with help from Pink Floyd
2023-08-15
As the chords of Pink Floyd's “Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1,” filled the surgery suite, neuroscientists at Albany Medical Center diligently recorded the activity of electrodes placed on the brains of patients undergoing epilepsy surgery. The goal? To capture the electrical activity of brain regions tuned to attributes of the music — tone, rhythm, harmony and words — to see if they could reconstruct what the patient was hearing. More than a decade later, after detailed analysis of data from 29 such ...

Study proposes use of artificial intelligence to diagnose autism spectrum disorder

Study proposes use of artificial intelligence to diagnose autism spectrum disorder
2023-08-15
 Diagnosing autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is still a daunting challenge because of the degree of complexity involved, requiring highly specialized professionals. Autism is a multifactorial neurodevelopment disorder with widely varying symptoms. In the United States, about 1 in 36 children have been diagnosed with ASD, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and yet there are no biochemical markers to identify it with precision. A quantitative diagnostic method is proposed by Brazilian researchers in an article published in ...

New algorithm captures complex 3D light scattering information from live specimens

New algorithm captures complex 3D light scattering information from live specimens
2023-08-15
BOSTON - Researchers have developed a new algorithm for recovering the 3D refractive index distribution of biological samples that exhibit multiple types of light scattering. The algorithm helps optimize a new imaging approach called intensity diffraction tomography (IDT). Jiabei Zhu from Boston University will present this research at the Optica Imaging Congress. The hybrid meeting will take place 14 – 17 August 2023 in Boston, Massachusetts. “3D quantitative phase imaging (QPI) has superior features for various applications in the field of biomedical imaging. As a label-free technique, QPI ...

Advanced magnesium-based hydrogen storage materials and their applications

Advanced magnesium-based hydrogen storage materials and their applications
2023-08-15
As an energy carrier, hydrogen holds the prominent advantages of high gravimetric energy density, high abundance, and zero emission, yet its effective storage and transportation remain a bottleneck problem for the widespread applications of hydrogen energy. To address such an issue, different types of hydrogen storage materials are developed and carefully investigated in the past decades. Among them, magnesium hydride (MgH2) has been considered as one of the most promising hydrogen storage materials because of its high capacity, excellent reversibility, sufficient magnesium reserves, and low cost. However, the poor thermodynamic and kinetic properties ...

Decoding how molecules "talk" to each other to develop new nanotechnologies

Decoding how molecules talk to each other to develop new nanotechnologies
2023-08-15
Two molecular languages at the origin of life have been successfully recreated and mathematically validated, thanks to pioneering work by Canadian scientists at Université de Montréal. Published this week in the Journal of American Chemical Society, the breakthrough opens new doors for the development of nanotechnologies with applications ranging from biosensing, drug delivery and molecular imaging. Living organisms are made up of billions of nanomachines and nanostructures that communicate to create higher-order entities able to do many essential things, such as moving, thinking, surviving and reproducing. “The key to life’s emergence ...

Favored asylum seekers are young, female and fleeing war

2023-08-15
Russia’s attack on Ukraine has resulted in one of the largest movements of refugees since the Second World War. More than 7.4 million Ukrainians have sought asylum in Europe, almost three times the number of people who found refuge in Europe during Syria’s civil war in 2015 and 2016. To investigate whether and how the willingness of host populations to receive refugees has changed since 2016, an international research team involving ETH Zurich, the University of California, Berkeley, and Stanford University surveyed 33,000 people in 15 European countries. The first wave of the survey took place in February 2016 and the second from May to June ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The Lancet Psychiatry: Conversion practice linked to greater risk of mental health symptoms, surveys of LGBTQ+ people in the USA suggest

Most accurate ultrasound test could detect 96% of women with ovarian cancer

Sylvester study: MRI provides early warning system for glioblastoma growth

Making soybeans smarter

New wearable laser device monitors brain blood flow to gauge stroke risk

BU professor receives $29M NIH grant to study dementia risk factors, prevention, and treatment

Ninth Circuit reverses lower court, reinforces FDA's authority to regulate unproven stem cell products

Wnt happens in kidney development?

Where flood policy helps most — and where it could do more

Combining AI and thermal video offers a new window into weightlifting

Childhood social interactions combat stereotypes

Researchers harness liquid crystal structures to design simple, yet versatile bifocal lenses

Suicide attempts decreased after adding suicide care to primary care, study finds

One in three Americans has a dysfunctional metabolism, but intermittent fasting could help

Time-restricted eating associated with greater blood sugar control and fat loss than standard nutrition counseling

New imaging technique brings us closer to simplified, low-cost agricultural quality assessment

Purdue-led TOMI project receives $3.5M grant to turn a decade of data into new tools and strategies for tomato farmers

Could a bout of COVID protect you from a severe case of flu?

When detecting depression, the eyes have it

NRG Oncology trial implies the addition of atezolizumab concurrently to standard of care does not improve survival in limited-stage small cell lung cancer

NRG Oncology trial supports radiotherapy and cisplatin should remain the standard of care for p16+ oropharyngeal cancer

Progression of subclinical atherosclerosis predicts all-cause mortality risk

Presence of subclinical atherosclerosis is marker of mortality and its progression increases risk of death

Wang unlocking complex heterogeneity in large spatial-temporal data with scalable quantile learning

Heart transplant patients from socioeconomically deprived areas face higher risk for postoperative complications, earlier death than others

Research alert: skin barrier protein also protects against inflammation

Saint Luke’s and UMKC to lead nationwide study on pregnant people with heart disease in effort to help combat maternal morbidity, mortality

Spiritual themes, distrust may factor into Black patients’ reluctance to participate in cancer clinical trials

Brigham study finds older adults who experience a fall are at increased risk of dementia

Trends in female physicians entering high-compensation specialties

[Press-News.org] New: Cutting-edge natural bioactive molecules effectively reduce cold symptoms