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Upper airway/throat Infections


Mopkop

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Posted

Hi mense

 

I've finished my 2nd round of antibiotics for the year on Saturday and I'm still like a dog. In Jan I had upper airway infection and now I had throat infection. On all early morning and late afternoon rides I cycle with my buff on BUT I'm still getting sick.

 

I take a beroca daily except on weekends as a supplement. I seen to get sick just after a hard training block/race and its really keeping me back.

 

What tips have you guys got on prevention and cure?

 

have an awesome evening

 

Mopkop

Posted

I've been having similar issues this year (but not as bad).

 

I have a bad throat for 3-4days after every hard training session or race. Never had an issue before, but now I can't seem to train without problems.

Posted

I had two throat infections in quick succession, and on the second hospital visit, my doc said I should take some immune boosters.

 

Went to my local pharmacist who's always been quite helpful. She recommended biobalance immunova tablets. Take two in the morning and I'm not only avoiding throat infections, but practically everything. I normally get quite sick at the turn of the seasons. This year, nothing. Placebo or not, I'm not sure, but it's the only thing that's really changed in my routine and it's made a difference.

Posted

I took a high dose of zinc supplement to aid my immune system, also was on a 6 week vitB12 complex course ( i bought the vials and syringes from the pharmacy after the doc showed me where to inject) seemed to have sorted out my being sick every 6 weeks

Posted

Doesn't matter what pills or boostersyou take. If the cold and flu wants you, it'll get you. Wash your hands often and don't touch your face. Best you can do.

Posted

Too many bouts of flu and colds too close together and you should start wondering whether you are not perhaps over training and depleting your immune system. Perhaps take an extra rest week now and again? The body knows how much rest it needs, If you overcook things, it will force you to stop. Using the flu is a gentle reminder. If you don't listen, you'll get a louder shout.

Posted

Throat tickles that progress into colds and flu have always been a symptom of overtraining for me.

 

When the signs begin I back off. Changing from a vegetarian diet to a more protein heavy diet has helped a great deal. What also helps is a generally good diet, eight hours of sleep a night and every fourth week an easy week.

 

In other words good recovery.

Posted

Very interesting, actually never thought about it too much the way you guys describe it above. Felt sore throat, blocked ears and snotty through most of January after going overboard with the riding during holidays and early Jan.

 

The body saying "back off a bit" !?

Posted

Taken from News24 Could vitamin C therapy cure a cold? Because humans don't produce their own vitamin C, it is important that we get enough of this vital nutrient on a regular basis.

 

When we get a cold, the first thing we are told is to get some vitamin C into our bodies. Even though a number of studies have found that taking vitamin C doesn’t prevent us from getting colds and flu, it does appear to strengthen our immunity – so, basically, the advice is good, and at the very least can’t do any harm.

 

Everyone knows how vitamin C in lemons cured scurvy in the eighteenth century, but the first doctor who started using vitamin C aggressively to treat illness was Frederick R. Klenner in the 1940s. He cured polio, measles, mumps, tetanus, chicken pox and a number of other diseases with massive doses of vitamin C.  

This may sound like a tall story, but Dr Klenner used vitamin C therapy for over forty years and wrote many medical papers on the subject which can be found in the Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C, edited by Lendon H. Smith, M.D.

 

Humans lost an enzyme

 

An interesting fact is that there are only four groups of mammals that do not produce vitamin C in their bodies, i.e. humans, other primates (e.g. apes and monkeys), guinea pigs and fruit bats.

The reason for this phenomenon is that of the four enzymes needed to convert glucose into vitamin C we have only three. Humans lost the fourth (L-gulonolactone Oxidase) somewhere during the course of our evolution – presumably because our diets were abundant in vitamin C.     

In mammals that produce their own vitamin C, it is created mainly as a response to stress. Under normal circumstances a mammal the size of the average human being (±70kg) produces 5,000 to 10,000 milligrams per day. However, when the animal is under stress, it produces four times that amount. When under stress a goat can make up to 100,000 milligrams of vitamin C!

 

Is our RDA for vitamin C too low?

 

The recommended daily allowance (RDA) of this vitamin for humans is below 100 milligrams per day, which seems rather low and could be the reason why animals that make a lot of vitamin C are much less prone to the diseases that we suffer from. They can also live up to 10 times beyond their physical maturity, compared to a maximum of 4 times for humans. Hypothetically, this means that if we take 20 as the age of physical maturity for humans, we could live up to 200 years if we produced our own vitamin C.

 

Read: RDA for vitamin C should be more

 

Dr Thomas Levy, author of Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases, and Toxins: Curing the Incurable maintains that “a human's inability to make the enzyme L-gulonolactone Oxidase must be considered an inborn error of metabolism” and that doctors should “consider this lack of enzyme activity in every medical condition”.

 

Linus Pauling

 

Perhaps the most famous name in the field of vitamin C research is Linus Pauling, one of the most important scientists of the 20th century. Pauling is the only person who ever received two unshared Nobel Prizes: the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1954) and the Nobel Peace Prize (1962).

Pauling became interested in the idea of high-dose vitamin C in 1966 and started taking 3 g per day. In 1970 he published Vitamin C and the Common Cold which helped to make vitamin C popular with the public. His best known book on health and vitamin therapy is How to Live Longer and Feel Better (1986).

 

Read: Natural cures for the common cold

 

In Vitamin C and the Common Cold, Pauling encouraged people to take a daily dose of 3,000 milligrams of vitamin C, which is 50 times the RDA. He believed that this would wipe out the common cold. The medical fraternity wasn’t quite as enthusiastic, and a number of scientific tests indicated that vitamin C did not “have any important effect on the duration or severity of infections of the upper respiratory tract”.

 

He also believed that vitamin C could cure cancer and refused to be put off by strong opposition from the scientific and medical establishments.

 

Oral vs. intravenous

 

Pauling found that cancer patients who received vitamin C lived four times longer than those who received no vitamin C. High-dose vitamin C was administered as sodium ascorbate, given orally and intravenously.

 

Read: Intravenous vitamin C boosts chemotherapy action 

 

Dr. Charles Moertel of the Mayo Clinic, who was the main opponent of Pauling’s thesis set about disproving his findings. In his tests he administered large amounts of oral vitamin C to the patients in his group, and when they failed to show improvements over patients not receiving vitamin C in the study, Moertel announced that Pauling’s hypothesis was wrong. He had conveniently forgotten that Pauling’s patients received both oral and intravenous vitamin C.  

This had a considerable impact on the reputation of vitamin C as an effective tool against cancer for a number of years, but in recent times people like Dr Hugh Riordan of Kansas have validated the benefits of intravenous vitamin C. Studies have indicated that oral vitamin C is poorly absorbed and that given intravenously it is much more effective against cancer.

 

Vitamin C has to be constantly replenished

 

Nowadays vitamin C is back in favour and is being used to protect against conditions as diverse as high blood pressure, heart disease, asthma, and cancer.   

Even the National Cancer Institute (NCI) which forms part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is singing the praises of vitamin C in the battle against cancer, and states in an overview of high-dose vitamin C: “Laboratory studies have reported that high-dose vitamin C has pro-oxidant properties and decreased cell proliferation in prostate, pancreatic, hepatocellular, colon, mesothelioma, and neuroblasoma cell lines."

Because vitamin C is a water-soluble vitamin it cannot be stored in the body for long and has to be replenished on a regular basis. Some of the best dietary sources of vitamin C are:

  • Bell peppers
  • Guavas
  • Dark green leafy vegetables
  • Kiwi fruit
  • Broccoli
  • Berries
  • Citrus fruits
  • Tomatoes
  • Peas
  • Papayas

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