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Help for SARS Found in Red Onions?
by
Bill Sardi
Hundreds
of people die of infectious respiratory disease in China every day.
But the fear is that SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), which
has only killed a few hundred people since November of 2002, represents
an unusual jump of a viral pathogen from animals to man. Coronaviruses
generally mutate rapidly and cause upper respiratory disease, whereas
the SARS coronavirus causes lower-lobe pneumonia and has not mutated
over a 7-week monitoring period. This virus is not mutating into
a weaker version as health authorities had hoped.
Corona
viruses are a family of RNA viruses that often infect animals like
cats, dogs, pigs and cows and cause 1020 percent of cases
of the common cold in humans. But the animal coronaviruses generally
do not affect humans, until now.
Even
though there are anti-viral drugs, there is no specific cure for
SARS as yet, and researchers are urgently in search of an effective
treatment. Reports in the news media describe the use of a synthetic
protein inhibitor, called a peptide blocker, which may be able to
control SARS. The protein or enzyme inhibitor drug, which already
exists under the trade name bestatin (ubenimex), blocks the entry
of RNA viruses like SARS coronavirus into cells. [The Lancet,
volume 361: May 3, 2003; Clinical Experimental Metastasis, volume
10: 4959, 1992] It does this by inhibiting the enzyme called
aminopeptidase N.
A
Medline search of the National Library of Medicine reveals a compound
found naturally in red onions and the peel of red apples has the
same biochemical action as bestatin (ubenimex) and may prove to
be a natural remedy against SARS. The natural molecule, called quercetin,
has the same or similar biochemical action as bestatin. A whole
red onion provides about 30 milligrams of quercetin. Quercetin is
widely sold as a dietary supplement in health food stores and is
produced commercially by a number of pharmaceutical companies in
China.
The
February 1990 issue of the German medical journal Pharmazie, describes
the ability of plant molecules, especially quercetin, in neutralizing
aminopeptidase N, the specific enzyme that permits RNA coronaviruses
to invade living cells. [Pharmazie, volume 55, 12932,
2000]
Quercetin
has other remarkable anti-viral properties, having been shown to
be active against herpes simplex, adenoviruses, rotaviruses, paramyxoviruses,
polio virus, parainfluenza and respiratory synctial virus. [Journal
Medical Virology, volume 15: 7179, 1985; Microbiologica,
volume 13, 20713, 1990]
About
2000 milligrams per day of quercetin, plus an equal amount of vitamin
C which enhances its effect, would be a recommended preventive dose.
Active infection may require 1000 milligrams taken every 12
hours. While quercetin is unproven in any clinical studies against
SARS, there is currently no anti-viral drug with specific action
against SARS coronavirus that has undergone clinical testing. SARS
researchers should not overlook this natural molecule which is widely
available, economical, and is generally free of side effects.
May
17, 2003
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is
a health journalist who dabbles from time to time in current affairs.
His website is www.askbillsardi.com
His most recent web report describes the hazards posed by statin
cholesterol-lowering drugs.
Copyright
© 2003 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not intended for commercial use or posting on commercial websites.
Permission to reprint should be obtained from
the author.
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