Weaken--Zinc Gel

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Weaken--Zinc Gel

by amysky_0205 » Wed Jan 23, 2013 7:13 pm
Though sucking zinc lozenges has been promoted as a treatment for the common cold, research has revealed no consistent effect. Recently, however, a zinc gel applied nasally has been shown to greatly reduce the duration of colds. Since the gel contains zinc in the same form and concentration as the lozenges, the greater effectiveness of the gel must be due to the fact that cold viruses tend to concentrate in the nose, not the mouth.

Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument?

A. Experimental subjects who used the zinc gel not only had colds of shorter duration but also had less severe symptoms than did those who used a gel that did not contain zinc.
B. The mechanism by which zinc affects the viruses that cause the common cold has not been conclusively established.
C. To make them palatable, zinc lozenges generally contain other ingredients, such as citric acid, that can interfere with the chemical activity of zinc.
D. No zinc-based cold remedy can have any effect unless it is taken or applied within 48 hours of the initial onset of cold symptoms.
E. Drug-company researchers experimenting with a nasal spray based on zinc have found that it has much the same effect on colds as the gel does.


OA: C

I narrowed down to C and E but chose E...
can someone explain? thank u!
Source: — Critical Reasoning |

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by brianlange77 » Wed Jan 23, 2013 7:36 pm
amysky_0205 wrote:Though sucking zinc lozenges has been promoted as a treatment for the common cold, research has revealed no consistent effect. Recently, however, a zinc gel applied nasally has been shown to greatly reduce the duration of colds. Since the gel contains zinc in the same form and concentration as the lozenges, the greater effectiveness of the gel must be due to the fact that cold viruses tend to concentrate in the nose, not the mouth.

Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument?

A. Experimental subjects who used the zinc gel not only had colds of shorter duration but also had less severe symptoms than did those who used a gel that did not contain zinc.
B. The mechanism by which zinc affects the viruses that cause the common cold has not been conclusively established.
C. To make them palatable, zinc lozenges generally contain other ingredients, such as citric acid, that can interfere with the chemical activity of zinc.
D. No zinc-based cold remedy can have any effect unless it is taken or applied within 48 hours of the initial onset of cold symptoms.
E. Drug-company researchers experimenting with a nasal spray based on zinc have found that it has much the same effect on colds as the gel does.


OA: C

I narrowed down to C and E but chose E...
can someone explain? thank u!
E is a great... I mean GREAT... trap answer. The problem with E is that it introduces some 'wonderful sounding' but dangerously 'new' information, that fundamentally, I'm left wondering what it really tells us. All E tells us is that "Hey... a nasal spray works as well as the gel." Great. So.. what?

C is beautiful -- why? It introduces a "Oh no you didn't" piece of new information that makes you say -- wait one second... what if the lozenge actually works, but it's all that darned citric acid that undoes the effect of the zinc in the lozenge? (PS -- This is true.. check this out -- https://www.getpharmacyadvice.com/orange ... h-allegra/)

Does that helps?

-Brian
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by shenoydevika » Wed Jan 23, 2013 8:02 pm
Also, I think E kind of strengthens the argument. It says that a zinc nasal spray works just as well as the zinc gel but we know the zinc lozenge doesn't. So it provides MORE proof that those nasty viruses are in the nose.

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by David@VeritasPrep » Thu Jan 24, 2013 9:35 am
I received a PM just a few minutes ago asking me to comment on this one and to expand on what has been written so far.

Let me first allow the real world to intrude on the GMAT for a moment. In case you have not heard, zinc nasal gels/ sprays/ swabs can cause a permanent loss of smell. That is the first thing that this question makes me think of. I have a family member who lost his sense of smell in an accident and it is a very strange thing. It took away most of his sense of taste as well since much of taste is smell. The FDA has warned against these things for a couple of years, but in case there is still some out there (ZiCam was the brand name) be sure not to use it. Here is a reference https://www.webmd.com/cold-and-flu/news/ ... loss-smell

As to this question, we are looking for an alternate cause. You see, this question attributes the fact that the nasal application works and the lozenge does not to the viruses concentrating in the nose not the mouth. A great way to weaken a cause and effect is to present an alternate cause that explains the facts at least as well as the proposed cause does.

Choice C offers that alternate cause. It may be that the gel works better than the lozenge not because of the location of the virus, but because of an additional ingredient in the lozenge.

Choice E would not really weaken - in fact shenoydevika has explained it right on the money. Choice E strengthens since it also is a remedy that is applied to the nose. It seems to strengthen the implied cause that the viruses are in the nose. So this one should not be in the running.

So amysky - you nearly had it - you just chose the strengthener instead of the weakener, which - of course - is quite common!
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