Respiratory Tract Infections and the Role of Biologically Active Polysaccharides in Their Management and Prevention
Abstract
1. Recurrent Respiratory Tract Infections and Their Management
2. Biologically Active Polysaccharides as Biological Response Modifiers
3. β-Glucans Isolated from Pleurotus Ostreatus and Respiratory Tract Infections
4. Yeast and Oat β-Glucans and Respiratory Tract Infections
5. β-Glucans, Recurrent Respiratory Tract Infections, and Sports Medicine
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Country of Study | Study Population | Age | Study Design | Main Outcomes | β-Glucan Type (Dose) | Duration of Treatment | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Czech and Slovak Republic | 215 children with RRTIs | 4.7 years | OLS | ↓ frequency of RRTIs (positive therapeutic response—≥50% reduction of RRTI frequency—in 71.2% of children (p < 0.001) | Pleuran—insoluble β-glucan from Pleurotus ostreatus (10 mg/10 kg of body weight) | 3 months (& 3 months follow-up) | Jesenak et al., 2010 [18] |
2 | Spain | 151 children with RRTIs | 3.0 years | OLS | ↓ frequency of RRTIs (p < 0.001) ↓ number of otitis media (p < 0.001), common cold (p < 0.001), tonsillopharyngitis (p < 0.001), laryngitis (p < 0.001), bronchitis (p < 0.001), pneumonia (p < 0.05) ↓ number of emergency visits due to respiratory infections (p < 0.001) ↓ number of days-off from kindergarten or school (p < 0.05) ↓ use of symptomatic therapy (p < 0.05) | Pleuran—insoluble β-glucan from Pleurotus ostreatus (10 mg/10 kg of body weight) | 3 months (& 3 months follow-up) | Sapena Grau et al., 2015 [19] |
3 | Poland | 194 children with RRTIs | 3.7 years | OLS | ↓ frequency of RRTIs (p < 0.001) ↓ number of otitis media (p < 0.01), laryngitis (p < 0.01), bronchitis (p < 0.01), common cold (p < 0.01) ↓ number of days-off from kindergarten or school (p < 0.01) | Pleuran—insoluble β-glucan from Pleurotus ostreatus (10 mg/10 kg of body weight) | 3 months (& 3 months follow-up) | Pasnik et al., 2017 [20] |
4 | Czech and Slovak Republic | 175 children with RRTIs | 5.6 years | DBPCRT | ↓ frequency of RRTIs (p < 0.05) ↑ number of healthy children (p < 0.05) ↓ number of flu and flu-like diseases (p < 0.05) ↓ number of lower respiratory tract infections (p < 0.05) immunomodulating effects on antibody production immunomodulating effects on cellular immunity | Pleuran—insoluble β-glucan from Pleurotus ostreatus (10 mg/10 kg of body weight) | 6 months (& 6 months follow-up) | Jesenak et al., 2013 [3] |
5 | Slovak Republic | 53 adult patients with Crohn‘s disease | 37.0 years | DBPCRT | ↓ frequency of accompanying diseases (respiratory tract infections, herpes simplex infections, oral thrush) (p = 0.019) Ø effect of Crohn’s diseases activity | Pleuran—insoluble β-glucan from Pleurotus ostreatus (100 mg/day) | 12 months | Batovsky et al., 2015 [21] |
6 | Germany | 162 healthy adults | 43.2 years | DBPCRT | ↓ number of symptomatic cold episodes (p = 0.041) ↓ sleep difficulties caused by cold episodes (p < 0.028) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (900 mg/day) | 4 months | Auinger et al., 2013 [22] |
7 | U.S.A. | 77 stressed adult women | 38.0 years | DBPCRT | ↓ upper respiratory symptoms (p < 0.05) ↑ overall well-being and superior mental/physical energy levels (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (250 mg/day) | 3 months | Talbott et al., 2012 [23] |
8 | U.S.A. | 150 moderately to highly-stressed adults | 39.0 years | DBPCRT | ↓ upper respiratory tract infection symptoms (p < 0.05) ↑ overall well-being and vigor (p < 0.05) ↓ fatigue and tension (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (250 or 500 mg/day) | 1 month | Talbott et al., 2010 [24] |
9 | U.S.A. | 40 healthy adults | 30.3 years | DBPCRT | Ø differences in the incidence of symptomatic respiratory tract infection ↓ number of missed day of scholld or work per cold (p = 0.026) ↑ quality of life in active group (p = 0.042) ↓ average fever score (p = 0.042) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (500 mg/day) | 3 months | Feldman et al., 2009 [25] |
10 | Germany | 94 healthy adults | 45.6 years | DBPCRT | Ø differences in the incidence of common cold ↑ subjects without incidence of common cold compares to placebo (p = 0.019) ↓ number of infections during the most intense season for infection (p = 0.02) ↓ of typical common cold symptoms: sore throat and/or difficulty swallowing (p = 0.034), hoarseness and/or cough (p < 0.001), runny nose (p < 0.001) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (450 mg/day) | 7 months | Graubaum et al., 2012 [26] |
11 | United Kingdom | 97 healthy adults | 21.0 years | DBPCRT | Ø effect on the incidence of respiratory tract infection ↑ ability to “breathe easily” (p = 0.049) Ø effect on chemokines and cytokines production | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (250 mg/day) | 3 months | Fuller et al., 2012 [27] |
12 | Czech Republic | 40 children with chronic respiratory problems | 10.7 years | DBPCRT | Improvement of mucosal immunity: ↑ lysozyme (p < 0.05), ↓ albumin (p < 0.05) Improvement in general disease condition | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (100 mg/day) | 1 month | Vetvicka et al., 2013 [28] |
13 | Czech Republic | 40 children with chronic respiratory problems | 10.7 years | DBPCRT | ↑ of salivary immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, IgM) (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (100 mg/day) | 1 month | Vetvicka et al., 2013 [29] |
14 | Czech Republic | 60 children with chronic respiratory problems | 9.7 years | DBPCRT | ↓ of salivary lysozyme (p < 0.05), calprotectin (p = 0.015), albumin (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (100 mg/day) | 1 month | Richter et al., 2014 [30] |
15 | Czech Republic | 56 children with chronic respiratory problems | 9.7 years | DBPCRT | ↓ of salivary cotinine (p < 0.05) and cortisol levels (p < 0.05) ↑ of physical endurance (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (100 mg/day) | 1 month | Richter et al., 2014 [31] |
16 | Czech Republic | 40 children with chronic respiratory problems | 10.9 years | DBPCRT | ↑ of physical endurance (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (100 mg/day) | 1 month | Vetvicka et al., 2013 [32] |
17 | Czech Republic | 77 children with chronic respiratory problems | 10.3 years | DBPCRT | Stabilization of the salivary IgA levels | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (100 mg/day) | 1 month | Richter et al., 2015 [33] |
18 | U.S.A. | 264 healthy children | 3.5 years | DBPCRT | ↓ number and duration of acute respiratory infections (p = 0.007) ↓ antibiotic use (p = 0.01) Immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory effects | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (26.1 mg/day) | 7 months | Li et al., 2014 [34] |
No. | Country | Study Population | Age | Study Design | Main Outcomes | β-Glucan Type (Dose) | Duration of Treatment | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | U.S.A. | 60 recreationally active adults | 22.5 years | DBPCRT | ↑ potential of blood leukocytes to produce IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IFN-γ (p < 0.05) Effect on respiratory morbidity not studied | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (100 mg/day) | 20 days (cross-over after 10 days) | Carpenter et al., 2013 [36] |
2 | Slovak Republic | 20 elite athletes | 23.3 years | DBPCRT | Prevention of decline in natural killer cell numbers and activity (p < 0.001) Effect on respiratory morbidity not studied | Pleuran—insoluble β-glucan from Pleurotus ostreatus (100 mg/day) | 2 months | Bobovcak et al., 2010 [37] |
3 | Slovak Republic | 50 elite athletes | 23.6 years | DBPCRT | ↓ incidence of upper respiratory tract infections (p < 0.001) ↑ number of natural killer cells (p < 0.001) Prevention of decline of phagocytic functions (p < 0.001) | Pleuran—insoluble β-glucan from Pleurotus ostreatus (200 mg/day) | 3 months (& 3 months follow-up) | Bergendiova et al., 2010 [38] |
4 | U.S.A. | 75 marathon runners | 36.0 years | DBPCRT | ↓ number of upper respiratory tract infection symptoms (p < 0.05) ↑ overall health and vigor (p < 0.05) ↓ confusion, fatigue, tension, and anger (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (250 or 500 mg/day) | 1 month | Talbott et al., 2009 [39] |
5 | U.S.A. | 182 marathon runners | 34.0 years | DBPCRT | ↓ number of cold/flu symptom days (p = 0.026) ↑ salivary IgA after exercise (p < 0.05) | Insoluble yeast β-glucan (250 mg/day) | 1 month | McFarlin et al., 2013 [40] |
6 | U.S.A. | 36 trained male cyclists | DBPCRT | Ø effect on incidence of upper respiratory tract infections Ø effect on exercise-induced immune changes | Insoluble oat β-glucan (5.6 g/day) | 2 weeks (+ & weeks follow-up) | Nieman et al., 2008 [41] |
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Jesenak, M.; Urbancikova, I.; Banovcin, P. Respiratory Tract Infections and the Role of Biologically Active Polysaccharides in Their Management and Prevention. Nutrients 2017, 9, 779. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070779
Jesenak M, Urbancikova I, Banovcin P. Respiratory Tract Infections and the Role of Biologically Active Polysaccharides in Their Management and Prevention. Nutrients. 2017; 9(7):779. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070779
Chicago/Turabian StyleJesenak, Milos, Ingrid Urbancikova, and Peter Banovcin. 2017. "Respiratory Tract Infections and the Role of Biologically Active Polysaccharides in Their Management and Prevention" Nutrients 9, no. 7: 779. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070779
APA StyleJesenak, M., Urbancikova, I., & Banovcin, P. (2017). Respiratory Tract Infections and the Role of Biologically Active Polysaccharides in Their Management and Prevention. Nutrients, 9(7), 779. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070779