Men's Fitness

The sneezy way out

Man-flu does exist, according to a recent report in the British Medical Journal. Here’s how to shield yourself from its effects

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Never get a cold again thanks to this expert advice

1 DON’T RUB YOUR EYES

Whether you think you are holding a winning lottery ticket or Mila Kunis has just strolled into your spinning class, whatever you do don’t rub your peepers. According to the NHS, a duct links the eyes and the nasal cavity, and any virus can easily transfer from your eyes to your nose and throat, causing an infection.

2 KEEP IT CLEAN

Do we really need to say it? The single best way to beat off bugs is to wash your hands thoroughly and frequently. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend you scrub your digits for around 20 seconds – as long as it takes to sing “Happy Birthday” twice. In your head, though, not out loud.

3 GET HOT AND STEAMY

Not in bed – at your gym. Taking a sauna can halve your risk of picking up a nasty bug, according to an Austrian study: over a six-month period subjects taking a sauna twice a week experience­d significan­tly fewer incidences of common cold symptoms compared with a control group who didn’t get hot under the collar.

4 THEN HAVE A COLD SHOWER

An ice-cold shower increases your blood’s level of white cells, whose main responsibi­lity is to seek and destroy any nasty invaders. Research from the Thrombosis Research Institute in London says that this spike is caused by your body’s metabolic rate increasing in an attempt to warm you up.

5 TAKE D, NOT C

Don’t get us wrong, it’s great to have some vitamin C in your system mopping up damaging free radicals – but it won’t do anything to prevent or lessen the effects of a cold. Instead, load up on vitamin D, because a study published in the Archives Of Internal Medicine reported that people with a vitamin D deficiency are more vulnerable to colds. You get it from sunshine and it’s found in some fish, but it’s worth popping a pill to get a decent daily dose.

6 OUTRUN THE BUGS

There’s more to exercise than beating your 10K PB or getting a six-pack. Regularly working out will also keep your immune system firing on all fronts. A US study found that, over the course of three months, people who did little or no exercise fell ill almost twice as often as those who exercised five times a week.

7 SLEEP SOUNDLY

As well as making you grumpy, getting less than seven hours of shut-eye a night makes you three times more likely to succumb to a cold than those getting eight hours or more, according to American research. If you spend just 8% of the time you are supposed to be sleeping awake, your risk of getting a cold increases fivefold.

8 WRAP UP WARM

Your mum lied – going outside with wet hair will not result in an instant cold. But being exposed to cold temperatur­es can reduce the effectiven­ess of your immune system. A study published in the Internatio­nal Journal Of Tuberculos­is And Lung Disease concluded that any lowering of your core body temperatur­e makes you more susceptibl­e to infections.

9 SOUP IT UP

If you’ve already succumbed to the lurgy, all is not lost. The NHS says that there is “evidence to suggest that there may be some truth in the belief that eating chicken soup helps to relieve the symptoms of a cold”. Yes, the old wives were right – it’s thought to be because it contains immuneboos­ting protein, keeps you hydrated and has anti-inflammato­ry properties.

 ??  ?? 8 The distance in metres that germs can travel when sneezed, according to data from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology
8 The distance in metres that germs can travel when sneezed, according to data from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology

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