Skip to content
OVistoaIntelligence index
AboutMethodologyPricingDocs
Sign inSign up
BREAKINGPerson found dead in car after it plows into health club in Portland, Oregon2 hr ago
Top StoriesUnited StatesCanadaWorldPoliticsGeneralBusinessTechHealthSportsAviationArtificial IntelligencePublishers

Why you should ‘feed a cold’: eating primes immune cells for action

1 articles · 1 outlets · spread 0.00

Why you should ‘feed a cold’: eating primes immune cells for action
general21 hr ago

Why you should ‘feed a cold’: eating primes immune cells for action

Full coverage view across outlets, lean, source quality, and framing. Compare framing without algorithmic ranking.

1 articles1 outletsSpread 0.000 claims
OVistoa

Article-level news analysis, transparent scoring, and API tools for readers, publishers, and teams that need source context.

DMCA and copyright review

Copyright owners can submit notices, counter-notices, and source material concerns through the dedicated review flow.

Open DMCA review

Product

  • Home
  • Feed
  • Search
  • Topics
  • Saved

Platform

  • About
  • Methodology
  • Home
  • Search
  • Saved
  • Me

From the Left

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

From the Center

1 outlet
  • Nature

    Why you should ‘feed a cold’: eating primes immune cells for action

    T cells, shown here attacking a tumour cell, might provide a better defence after a person has eaten.Credit: selvanegra/GettyThe best time to get an infection might be after a meal, suggest experiments in mice and humans that found that certain immune cells, known as T cells, seem to get a boost from food.The findings, published on 29 April in Nature1, could identify ways to improve immune therapies, help physicians to decide when to give vaccinations and eventually show how diet can improve immunity.The brain fires up immune cells when sick people are nearby“There’s the old adage: starve a fever, feed a cold. And we think that there’s some value in this,” says study co-author Greg Delgoffe, an immunologist at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. He thinks that researchers should reassess how diet influences the immune response. “We don’t really ask, when have you eaten last and what did you eat?” he says. “But that may make a big difference to how effective those T cells are.”“I think this is really an exciting study,” says Lionel Apetoh, an immunologist at Indiana University in Indianapolis who was not involved in the work. He notes that previous T-cell research has looked at

From the Right

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

Claim synthesis

Pro users see canonical claims across the cluster and which outlets reported each one.

Learn more

Outlets covering this story

Nature

First seen

Date unavailable

Latest

May 2, 2026

Outlets

1

Diversity

100/100

  • Pricing
  • API docs
  • Publishers
  • Account

    • Sign in
    • Create account
    • Reader settings
    • API console

    Legal

    • Terms
    • Privacy
    • Security
    • DMCA

    © 2026 Vistoa. All rights reserved.

    Limited excerpts, attribution, analysis, and outbound publisher links remain core product boundaries.