By Jack Challem
Copyright © 1998 by Jack Challem, The Nutrition Reporter
All rights reserved.
Supplementing with N-acetylcysteine (NAC) can dramatically reduce the frequency and severity of flu-like symptoms in elderly high-risk individuals, according to a study by Italian researchers.
Two hundred and sixty-two men and women were asked to take 600 mg of NAC or a placebo twice daily for six months covering the peak wintertime flu season. NAC is a well-absorbed and safe form of the amino acid cysteine.
Each of the subjects was given a diary and asked to make note of such symptoms as fever, muscular weakness, loss of appetite, headache, aches and pains, nasal discharge, sore throat, and cough. Researchers defined "influenza-like episodes" as when two or more of the symptoms occurred at the same time.
"The overall frequency of patients suffering from influenza-like episodes...was significantly lower in NAC-treated subjects than in placebo-treated subjects," wrote S. De Flora, MD, of the Universiy of Genoa in the European Respiratory Journal. Of those subjects with laboratory-confirmed flu antibodies, only 25 percent of the NAC group developed symptoms, compared with 79 percent of the placebo group.
Similarly, of the "flu-like" cases among people taking NAC, 72 percent were mild, 26 percent were moderate, and 2 percent were severe. In the placebo group, 48 percent of the infections were mild, 47 percent were moderate, and 6 percent were severe.
"An additional criterion for evaluating the severity of influenza-like episodes was the length of time in bed which, irrespective of the age of patients, was remarkably shorter in NAC-treated subjects," De Flora wrote. "In fact, in the 10 subjects suffering from influenza-like episodes who were not bedridden, nine were under NAC treatment."
NAC also increased the activity of the immune system, encouraging a more vigorous response to infection, according to De Flora.
Reference: De Flora S, Grassi C, Carati L, "Attenuation of influenza-like symptomology and improvement of cell-mediated immunity with long-term N-acetylcysteine treatment," European Respiratory Journal, 1997;10:1535-1541.
This article originally appeared in The Nutrition Reporter newsletter. The information provided by Jack Challem and The Nutrition Reporter newsletter is strictly educational and not intended as medical advice. For diagnosis and treatment, consult your physician.