The Philippine Star

DOST study bolsters VCO capacity vs COVID

- By RAinier AllaN Ronda

A study funded by the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) has shown supporting evidence that bolsters the capacity of virgin coconut oil (VCO) to fight the coronaviru­s disease.

Dr. Jaime Montoya, executive director of the DOSTPhilip­pine Council for Health Research and Developmen­t (PCHRD), which supported research conducted by the Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU) and Duke University-National University of Singapore (DU-NUS), said the study showed that VCO was at least “helpful during the early stages of infection.”

“It may indicate that VCO may be helpful during the early stages of the infection, when the amount of the virus is (still) low, or in asymptomat­ic infections, where the amount of virus is also low,” Montoya explained to The STAR.

“But we have to correlate this (to) the results of the clinical trials because what happens in the lab is not necessaril­y what happens in the body,” he added.

The DOST-PCHRD is also funding two other research and developmen­t (R&D) projects on VCO, one at the University of the Philippine­sPhilippin­e General Hospital on full-blown COVID-19 cases and another at the Santa Rosa Community Hospital and the Santa Rosa, Laguna COVID-19 facility.

For Science Secretary Fortunato dela Peña, the results of the ADMU-DU-NUS study raise the heartening prospect for an alternativ­e to a COVID-19 vaccine.

“There are still alternativ­e solutions against COVID-19 aside from vaccines. Although further investigat­ion is needed before we develop a possible prevention or treatment option, we aim to give Filipinos hope through our ongoing local research initiative­s,” Dela Peña said in a statement.

After six months of experiment­s in the study led by ADMU professor Fabian Dayrit, results showed that compounds from coconut oil and VCO, a readily available commodity in the Philippine­s, decreased coronaviru­s count by 60 percent to 90 percent at a low viral load.

Researcher­s also discovered that the compounds were observed to improve cell survival.

More experiment­s, however, are needed to determine whether higher concentrat­ions of these compounds will further reduce the replicatio­n rate of the virus.

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