Can oleandrin treat COVID-19?
Oleandrin, the extract of the oleander plant,?is a?potential therapy for COVID-19.
Rumor: Oleandrin, the extract of the oleander plant, is a potential therapy for COVID-19.
Fact:
No studies have shown that oleandrin is safe or effective as a coronavirus treatment.
According to The New York Times, the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases conducted a lab test in May to determine if oleandrin could stop coronavirus infection in cells.
The results were "inconclusive," and the agency opted to discontinue this line of research, Lori Salvatore, a spokeswoman for the Army's Medical Research and Development Command, was quoted as saying.
Meanwhile, "this is not a friendly plant ... don't go near this plant," said Matthew Heinz, an Arizona-based internal medicine physician currently caring for hospitalized COVID-19 patients, was quoted by the ABC News as saying.
Oleandrin is "akin to digoxin. Too much can cause nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, but the main concern is arrhythmias, which can be fatal," David Juurlink of the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center in Toronto told MedPage Today, a medical news service.
It is "easier to kill a person with oleandrin than COVID-19," Jennifer Gunter, MD, tweeted.
- China planning to raise age limit for blood donors, shorten the minimum interval
- Breakthrough in BMI tech aids patients
- Chinese technique for making ultrathin metal films named top 10 scientific breakthroughs
- Former senior political advisor of Sichuan sentenced to 14 years
- Beijing has undergone dramatic improvements since 2017's revamped development plans
- AI open alliance launched to pool resources for innovation and application
































