MARSHFIELD, Wis., Oct. 19 /PRNewswire/ -- With cold season just around the corner, a study conducted by Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield, Wis., questions the ability of the herb echinacea to reduce the severity or duration of the common cold.
“Our study didn’t show any benefit of using echinacea to treat the common cold,” said Steven H. Yale, M.D., a Marshfield Clinic internal medicine specialist and assistant director of the Clinical Research Center, Marshfield Clinic Research Foundation.
The study, published recently in the Archives of Internal Medicine, involved 128 individuals who received either 100 milligrams of echinacea or a placebo. Participants, who had to be within the first 24 hours of the onset of cold symptoms, were randomly assigned to take one of the two preparations. They were not told which of the identical-appearing medications they received.
Participants were asked to take the preparation three times a day until cold symptoms were relieved or at the end of 14 days, whichever came first. They subjectively scored their symptoms, including sneezing, nasal discharge, nasal congestion, headache, sore or scratchy throat, hoarseness, muscle aches and cough in a daily diary.
“One limitation of our study is that our sample size was small,” Yale said. Yale, who collaborated with Marshfield Clinic Biostatistician Kejian Liu, Ph.D., advocates more research on echinacea. “I would not recommend echinacea to treat the common cold until large, randomized studies are performed that confirm it is effective in lessening symptoms or shortening their duration,” he said.
Echinacea, touted in some studies as having the ability to shorten the duration of a cold or severity of its symptoms, is one of a host of herbs that comprise a more than $5.1 billion industry in the United States. One fifth of adults take at least one herb regularly, with echinacea representing 10 percent of sales.
The reason studies may contradict each other about benefits for certain herbs can be found in differences in study design, according to Yale.
There are three major species of cone flowers, from which echinacea is produced. Also, preparations vary depending on what part of the plant is used in the drug. The Marshfield Clinic study involved echinacea as a freeze-dried, pressed juice from the aerial portion of the cone plant.
The Marshfield Clinic system consists of 39 patient care and research and education facilities in northern, central and western Wisconsin, making it one of the largest comprehensive medical systems in the United States.
For more information on the study, published in the June 14, 2004 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, visit: http://archinte.ama-assn.org/ .
Marshfield Clinic
CONTACT: Chris Schellpfeffer, +1-608-251-7070, cschell@lsb.com , orTeresa Derfus, +1-715-387-9362, derfus.teresa@marshfieldclinic.org , both forMarshfield Clinic
Web site: http://archinte.ama-assn.org/