Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Researchers working on Covid vaccine that people can drink

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Jan, 2023 01:58 PM
  • Researchers working on Covid vaccine that people can drink

San Francisco, Jan 23 (IANS) Researchers are working on a Covid-19 vaccine that people may drink instead of receiving with a needle, expanding their focus onto mucosal vaccines, which include nasal vaccines as well as "swish and swallow" oral vaccines.

The vaccine, called QYNDR, completed its phase 1 clinical trial and is currently waiting on more funding to conduct the more detailed, advanced trials that could actually bring the vaccine to market, reports CNET.

"The QYNDR vaccine is pronounced 'kinder', because it's a softer way to deliver a vaccine," Kyle Flanigan, founder of QYNDR's maker, US Specialty Formulations, was quoted as saying.

Moreover, the report said that promising clinical trial results from New Zealand offer hope that QYNDR will be a viable option for protection against the string of Covid-19 variants circulating now.

"It's really challenging to have a vaccine survive making it through your digestive system," Flanigan said.

"We were able to figure out how to get a vaccine past the stomach and into the gut and have it be effective and induce the appropriate response," she added.

Scientists are hopeful that mucosal vaccines will not only protect against severe diseases and death, as revolutionary mRNA vaccines and boosters have but also ward off infections, the report said.

Different from traditional vaccines, mucosal vaccines enter through our mucous membranes, either through our nose (as in the much-discussed nasal Covid-19 vaccine) or through our gut (as in the orally suspended QYNDRs).

Mucosal vaccines have been supported as viable, or even preferable, options for combating Covid-19 infections due to the different types of immunity they produce and the fact that it begins right where the virus enters our bodies, the report mentioned.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Feeling demoralised bad for your heart

Feeling demoralised bad for your heart
Vital exhaustion, the combination of fatigue, increased irritability, and feeling demoralised, may raise a healthy man or woman's risk of first-time cardiovascular...

Feeling demoralised bad for your heart

Young women smokers at chronic period pain risk

Young women smokers at chronic period pain risk
Women who take up smoking during their teenage years run a significantly heightened risk of developing chronic severe period pain, finds new research....

Young women smokers at chronic period pain risk

Lowering cholesterol with drugs good for heart: Study

Lowering cholesterol with drugs good for heart: Study
A popular but controversial cholesterol drug called Ezetimibe has been found to lower the number of cardiovascular events by 6.4 percent when administered...

Lowering cholesterol with drugs good for heart: Study

Common antibacterial in soap may harm liver

Common antibacterial in soap may harm liver
Long-term exposure to triclosan, found in soaps, shampoos, toothpastes and many other household items, may cause liver fibrosis and cancer, an alarming study suggests....

Common antibacterial in soap may harm liver

A new smartphone that can print selfies in seconds

A new smartphone that can print selfies in seconds
A French company has developed a brand new smartphone case that can print selfies from the phone itself in less than a minute....

A new smartphone that can print selfies in seconds

Menthol and nicotine harmful for lungs: Study

Menthol and nicotine harmful for lungs: Study
Neuroscientists at Georgetown University Medical Center (GUMC) have found that menthol acts in combination with nicotine to desensitise receptors in lungs' ...

Menthol and nicotine harmful for lungs: Study