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Treatment of the common cold with unrefined echinacea. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.

Bruce P Barrett, Roger L Brown, Kristin Locken, Rob Maberry, James A Bobula et al.
RCT Annals of internal medicine 2002 178 citazioni
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo di studio
Randomized Controlled Trial
Dimensione del campione
148
Popolazione
Adults with naturally acquired common cold
Intervento
Treatment of the common cold with unrefined echinacea. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Unrefined echinacea (E. purpurea/angustifolia)
Comparatore
Placebo
Esito primario
Cold severity and duration
Direzione dell'effetto
Neutral
Rischio di bias
Low

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Echinacea preparations are widely used to treat the common cold. OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of dried, encapsulated, whole-plant echinacea as early treatment for the common cold. DESIGN: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled community-based trial. SETTING: University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin. PARTICIPANTS: 148 registered students with common colds of recent onset. INTERVENTION: An encapsulated mixture of unrefined Echinacea purpurea herb (25%) and root (25%) and E. angustifolia root (50%) taken in 1-g doses six times on the first day of illness and three times on each subsequent day of illness for a maximum of 10 days. MEASUREMENTS: Severity and duration of self-reported symptoms of upper respiratory tract infection. RESULTS: No statistically significant differences were detected between the echinacea and placebo groups for any of the measured outcomes. Trajectories of severity over time were nearly identical in the two groups. Mean cold duration was 6.01 days in both groups as a whole, 5.75 days in the placebo group, and 6.27 days in the echinacea group (between-group difference, -0.52 day [95% CI, -1.09 to 0.22 days]). After controlling for severity and duration of symptoms before study entry, sex, date of enrollment, and use of nonprotocol medications, researchers found no statistically significant treatment effect (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.24 [CI, 0.86 to 1.78]). Multivariable regression models assessing severity scores over time failed to detect statistically significant differences between the echinacea and placebo groups. CONCLUSION: Compared with placebo, unrefined echinacea provided no detectable benefit or harm in these college students who had the common cold.

TL;DR

This randomized, controlled trial compared a capsule form of Echinacea purpurea herb and root and E. angustifolia root with placebo in 148 college students with symptoms of the common cold and found that echinacea had no effect on the duration or severity of cold symptoms.

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