Hip
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A new study found evidence that hydroxychloroquine 400 mg plus zinc 50 mg daily has efficacy against COVID-19. This is in contrast to several other studies which found that hydroxychloroquine without zinc is not effective for COVID-19.
Hydroxychloroquine is a zinc ionophore, meaning that it binds to zinc ions and brings them inside cells. One inside the cell, these intracellular zinc ions have an antiviral effect against coronavirus. So it makes sense that giving COVID-19 patients a zinc supplement along with the hydroxychloroquine will be more effective than hydroxychloroquine alone.
Now intracellular zinc ions are not only antiviral for coronavirus, but also antiviral several other viruses, including coxsackievirus B, herpes simplex and hepatitis C virus. Ref: here.
Studies from 2007 and from 2009 found that zinc ionophores have antiviral efficacy against coxsackievirus B, a virus which is associated with many ME/CFS cases. In fact the 2009 study found zinc ionophores inhibit a range of picornaviruses (the family that enterovirus and coxsackievirus B belong to).
Now these 2007 and 2009 studies used zinc ionophores which are not generally available to the public (namely pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate, pyrithione and hinokitiol). However, we know that hydroxychloroquine is a zinc ionophore too, so we could use that instead.
Thus taking hydroxychloroquine plus zinc in the same doses used to treat coronavirus might well have some antiviral effect against the chronic enterovirus infections found in ME/CFS.
UPDATE 2023: it turns out that hydroxychloroquine is not a zinc ionophore, but chloroquine is. So this protocol may work better with chloroquine instead of hydroxychloroquine.
Unfortunately, at the moment hydroxychloroquine prices have shot up, because many people are buying this drug for coronavirus. Normally 100 x 200 mg tablets of hydroxychloroquine would cost $37, but prices are elevated above that now.
One possible substitute for hydroxychloroquine is ECGC (green tea extract), as this has been shown to function as a zinc ionophore. But I don't know how ECGC compares to hydroxychloroquine in terms of its zinc ionophore potency, and I am not sure what ECGC dose would be equivalent.
Other zinc ionophores include the drug PBT2, which is being trialed as an Alzheimer's treatment.
A list of zinc ionophores given here.
Hydroxychloroquine is a zinc ionophore, meaning that it binds to zinc ions and brings them inside cells. One inside the cell, these intracellular zinc ions have an antiviral effect against coronavirus. So it makes sense that giving COVID-19 patients a zinc supplement along with the hydroxychloroquine will be more effective than hydroxychloroquine alone.
Now intracellular zinc ions are not only antiviral for coronavirus, but also antiviral several other viruses, including coxsackievirus B, herpes simplex and hepatitis C virus. Ref: here.
Studies from 2007 and from 2009 found that zinc ionophores have antiviral efficacy against coxsackievirus B, a virus which is associated with many ME/CFS cases. In fact the 2009 study found zinc ionophores inhibit a range of picornaviruses (the family that enterovirus and coxsackievirus B belong to).
Now these 2007 and 2009 studies used zinc ionophores which are not generally available to the public (namely pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate, pyrithione and hinokitiol). However, we know that hydroxychloroquine is a zinc ionophore too, so we could use that instead.
Thus taking hydroxychloroquine plus zinc in the same doses used to treat coronavirus might well have some antiviral effect against the chronic enterovirus infections found in ME/CFS.
UPDATE 2023: it turns out that hydroxychloroquine is not a zinc ionophore, but chloroquine is. So this protocol may work better with chloroquine instead of hydroxychloroquine.
Unfortunately, at the moment hydroxychloroquine prices have shot up, because many people are buying this drug for coronavirus. Normally 100 x 200 mg tablets of hydroxychloroquine would cost $37, but prices are elevated above that now.
One possible substitute for hydroxychloroquine is ECGC (green tea extract), as this has been shown to function as a zinc ionophore. But I don't know how ECGC compares to hydroxychloroquine in terms of its zinc ionophore potency, and I am not sure what ECGC dose would be equivalent.
Other zinc ionophores include the drug PBT2, which is being trialed as an Alzheimer's treatment.
A list of zinc ionophores given here.
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