Cool health tech

Apr 17, 2025

A gum that stops herpes?

Scientists developed a gum that traps and neutralizes herpes viruses in the mouth using a protein called FRIL. This simple chewable method could help stop herpes spread — a fun innovation SlothMD loves!

According to a recent Molecular Therapy study​ and a ScienceAlert report, scientists have developed a special virus-trapping gum that can neutralize herpes viruses. In experiments, this gum “trapped” and deactivated common viruses like influenza and herpes simplex (HSV) right in the mouth, dramatically reducing the amount of virus that could potentially spread. With herpes infections so widespread and no approved vaccine available yet, this clever chewing-gum approach could become a much-needed tool in how to prevent herpes transmission in the real world.

How Virus Trapping Works

The secret ingredient in the gum is a natural protein from lablab beans called FRIL, short for fructose-binding lectin. Lectins are proteins that glom onto sugar molecules – and many viruses are covered in sugary structures. By sticking to these sugars, FRIL effectively locks up the virus and clumps multiple viruses together (like a molecular Velcro), preventing them from infecting our cells. This means the virus is neutralized – less able to invade and multiply​. It’s a broad antiviral strategy because many different viruses (flu, herpes, even coronaviruses) share similar sugar-coated shells. Interestingly, those sugary bits are rare on human cells, so FRIL mostly ignores your own tissues while it targets the germs. Scientists have been exploring such mucosal antiviral tricks for a while; for example, a red algae protein called griffithsin can bind to virus sugars and block HIV and HSV-2 in lab and animal studies. In short, the gum gives your mucosal immunity a boost by catching viruses at the gate (your saliva) before they can cause trouble.

What Makes This Gum Special?

This herpes gum therapy stands out for several reasons:

  • Broad-Spectrum Punch: In lab tests, a small amount of the gum’s extract neutralized over 95% of flu viruses and up to 94% of herpes viruses (HSV-2, and ~75% of HSV-1)​. Such broad antiviral activity is rare for a single product.

  • Traps Viruses at the Source: Chewing the gum releases FRIL into saliva, where it snags viruses right where they spread. The mouth and throat are major transmission hubs for viruses like flu and herpes, so lowering the viral load there could greatly cut down on contagion.

  • Safe & Snackable: The gum is made from edible bean powder, and FRIL has passed safety tests – it’s non-toxic and stable. In fact, the protein stays effective for over two years at room temperature in the gum​. The U.S. FDA already classifies lablab bean powder as safe for consumption​.

  • Easy Preventative: Unlike complex drugs or vaccines, this approach is as simple as chewing a piece of gum. It could complement vaccines (which don’t always stop transmission) by adding a second layer of defense in the mouth​. It’s a low-tech, affordable idea – the kind of clever simplicity SlothMD can’t help but smile at.

Researchers caution that while results so far are exciting, clinical trials will be the real test to see if the gum works as well in actual humans. But if all goes well, we might one day literally chew on a solution for herpes and other viruses. A fun, fruity gum that boosts your antiviral defenses? That’s a sweet example of science and innovation – and something SlothMD would happily chew over any day!​

Sources: 

Health tips

Apr 20, 2025

Circadian Misalignment vs. Sleep Deprivation: Why Your Body Clock Matters

New research shows that sleeping out of sync with your body’s natural circadian rhythm may raise the risk of chronic conditions like heart disease and diabetes — even more than getting too little sleep. Aligning your sleep schedule with your internal clock can improve overall health, and SlothMD can help you track and optimize that rhythm naturally.

Health tips

Apr 20, 2025

Circadian Misalignment vs. Sleep Deprivation: Why Your Body Clock Matters

New research shows that sleeping out of sync with your body’s natural circadian rhythm may raise the risk of chronic conditions like heart disease and diabetes — even more than getting too little sleep. Aligning your sleep schedule with your internal clock can improve overall health, and SlothMD can help you track and optimize that rhythm naturally.

Health tips

Apr 20, 2025

Circadian Misalignment vs. Sleep Deprivation: Why Your Body Clock Matters

New research shows that sleeping out of sync with your body’s natural circadian rhythm may raise the risk of chronic conditions like heart disease and diabetes — even more than getting too little sleep. Aligning your sleep schedule with your internal clock can improve overall health, and SlothMD can help you track and optimize that rhythm naturally.

important in health

Apr 20, 2025

Alpha-Gal syndrome: how a tick bite can trigger a red meat allergy

Alpha-gal syndrome, triggered by alpha-gal sugars in tick saliva, causes delayed allergic reactions to red meat. Initially linked to lone star ticks, recent research confirms other ticks — like deer and American dog ticks — can also spark this unusual allergy.

important in health

Apr 20, 2025

Alpha-Gal syndrome: how a tick bite can trigger a red meat allergy

Alpha-gal syndrome, triggered by alpha-gal sugars in tick saliva, causes delayed allergic reactions to red meat. Initially linked to lone star ticks, recent research confirms other ticks — like deer and American dog ticks — can also spark this unusual allergy.

important in health

Apr 20, 2025

Alpha-Gal syndrome: how a tick bite can trigger a red meat allergy

Alpha-gal syndrome, triggered by alpha-gal sugars in tick saliva, causes delayed allergic reactions to red meat. Initially linked to lone star ticks, recent research confirms other ticks — like deer and American dog ticks — can also spark this unusual allergy.

Health curiosities

Apr 19, 2025

Wounded skin sends a slow electrical signal for healing

Researchers discovered that injured skin cells send out slow electrical pulses to communicate with their neighbors​. These wounded epithelial cells (the cells forming our skin and other barriers) generate “spikes” of bioelectric activity – essentially tiny voltage signals – that travel almost half a millimeter (dozens of cell lengths) away. The pulses last for hours, acting like an electrical SOS that could rally surrounding cells to start the healing process.

Health curiosities

Apr 19, 2025

Wounded skin sends a slow electrical signal for healing

Researchers discovered that injured skin cells send out slow electrical pulses to communicate with their neighbors​. These wounded epithelial cells (the cells forming our skin and other barriers) generate “spikes” of bioelectric activity – essentially tiny voltage signals – that travel almost half a millimeter (dozens of cell lengths) away. The pulses last for hours, acting like an electrical SOS that could rally surrounding cells to start the healing process.

Health curiosities

Apr 19, 2025

Wounded skin sends a slow electrical signal for healing

Researchers discovered that injured skin cells send out slow electrical pulses to communicate with their neighbors​. These wounded epithelial cells (the cells forming our skin and other barriers) generate “spikes” of bioelectric activity – essentially tiny voltage signals – that travel almost half a millimeter (dozens of cell lengths) away. The pulses last for hours, acting like an electrical SOS that could rally surrounding cells to start the healing process.

©2025 — 360H, Inc.

*We are not affiliated, associated, or endorsed by any of the companies whose logos appear on this site. Their trademarks are the property of their respective owners, and any mention or depiction is solely for informational purposes.

©2025 — 360H, Inc.

*We are not affiliated, associated, or endorsed by any of the companies whose logos appear on this site. Their trademarks are the property of their respective owners, and any mention or depiction is solely for informational purposes.