Are cold
symptoms making you feel miserable? Here are 12 cold remedies you can use right
now -- at home -- to feel better.
Cold Remedy 1:
Drink plenty of fluids to help break up your congestion. Drinking water or
juice will prevent dehydration and keep your throat moist. You should drink at
least 8 to 10 eight-ounce glasses of water daily. Include fluids such as water,
sports drinks, herbal teas, fruit drinks, or ginger ale. Your mother's chicken
soup might help too! (Avoid cola, coffee, and other drinks with caffeine
because it acts like a diuretic and may dehydrate you.)
Cold Remedy 2:
Inhale steam to ease your congestion and drippy nose. Hold your head over a pot
of boiling water and breathe through your nose. Be careful. If the steam
burns your nose, breathe in more slowly.
You can buy a humidifier, but the steam will be the same as the water on the
stove. Moisture from a hot shower with the door closed, saline nasal spray, or
a room humidifier is just as helpful to ease congestion.
Cold Remedy 3:
Blow your nose often, but do it the proper way. It's important to blow your
nose regularly when you have a cold rather than sniffling mucus back into your
head. But when you blow hard, pressure can carry germ-carrying phlegm back into
your ear passages, causing earache. The best way to blow your nose is to press
a finger over one nostril while you blow gently to clear the other.
Cold Remedy 4:
Use saline nasal sprays or make your own salt water rinse to irrigate your
nose. Salt-water rinsing helps break nasal congestion while also removing virus
particles and bacteria from your nose. Here's a popular recipe:
Mix 1/4 teaspoon
salt and 1/4 teaspoon baking soda in 8 ounces of warm water. Fill a bulb
syringe with this mixture (or use a Neti pot, available at most health foods
stores). Lean your head over a basin, and using the bulb syringe, gently squirt
the salt water into your nose. Hold one nostril closed by applying light finger
pressure while squirting the salt mixture into the other nostril. Let it drain.
Repeat two to three times, and then treat the other nostril.
It's important
to note that, according to the CDC, if you are irrigating, flushing, or rinsing
your sinuses, use distilled, sterile, or previously boiled water to make up the
irrigation solution. It’s also important to rinse the irrigation device after
each use and leave open to air dry.
Cold Remedy 5:
Stay warm and rested. Staying warm and resting when you first come down with a
cold or the flu helps your body direct its energy toward the immune battle.
This battle taxes the body. So give it a little help by lying down under a
blanket to stay warm if necessary.
Cold Remedy 6:
Gargle with warm salt water. Gargling can moisten a sore or scratchy throat and
bring temporary relief. Try a half teaspoon of salt dissolved in 8 ounces of
warm water four times daily. To reduce the tickle in your throat, try an
astringent gargle -- such as tea that contains tannin -- to tighten the
membranes. Or use a thick, viscous gargle made with honey, popular in folk
medicine. Steep one tablespoon of raspberry leaves or lemon juice in two cups
of hot water; mix with one teaspoon of honey. Let the mixture cool to room
temperature before gargling.
Cold Remedy 7:
Drink hot liquids. Hot liquids relieve nasal congestion, prevent dehydration,
and soothe the uncomfortably inflamed membranes that line your nose and throat.
If you're so congested you can't sleep at night, try a hot toddy, an age-old
remedy. Make a cup of hot herbal tea. Add one teaspoon of honey and one small
shot (about 1 ounce) of whiskey or bourbon if you wish. Limit yourself to one.
Too much alcohol inflames those membranes and is counterproductive.
Cold Remedy 8:
Take a steamy shower. Steamy showers moisturize your nasal passages and relax
you. If you're dizzy from the flu, run a steamy shower while you sit on a chair
nearby and take a sponge bath.
Cold Remedy 9:
Try a small dab of mentholated salve under your nose to help open breathing
passages and help restore the irritated skin at the base of the nose. Menthol,
eucalyptus, and camphor all have mild numbing ingredients that may help relieve
the pain of a nose rubbed raw.
Cold Remedy 10:
Apply hot packs around your congested sinuses. You can buy reusable hot packs
at a drugstore. Or make your own. Take a damp washcloth and heat it for 30
seconds in a microwave. (Test the temperature first to make sure it's right for
you.)
Cold Remedy 11:
Sleep with an extra pillow under your head. This will help relieve congested
nasal passages. If the angle is too awkward, try placing the pillows between
the mattress and the box springs to create a more gradual slope.
Cold Remedy 12:
Learn about natural remedies like zinc, echinacea, and vitamin C. People
looking for natural cold remedies often turn to supplements.
Zinc: While
early studies showed that zinc could help fight off a cold more quickly, the
latest consensus seems to be that zinc has a minimal benefit at best.
Echinacea: While
echinacea was once a very popular cold remedy, the latest science indicates
that it does not appear to prevent colds and is not an effective treatment.
Researchers are continuing to study echinacea’s effects on respiratory
infections to determine if there is some benefit.
Vitamin C: What about vitamin C? A recent survey of 65 years' worth of
studies found limited benefit. The researchers found no evidence that vitamin C
prevents colds. However, they did find evidence that vitamin C may shorten how
long you suffer from a cold. One large study found that people who took a
vitamin C megadose -- 8 grams on the first day of a cold -- shortened the
duration of their colds.
really nice
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