Thursday, December 31, 2009

Common Allergies What Is The Difference Between The Common Cold And Allergies?

What is the difference between the common cold and allergies? - common allergies

I know this question sounds stupid, but if you tell people that when you have a cold I have to always hear "It could be allergies." I know that cold is not the rhinovirus and an allergy is a virus. My question is this: there are different symptoms of allergies, cold front? I really do not think that I am allergic to anything, but I'm curious how people come to this conclusion.

2 comments:

wayfarou... said...

People who do not speak really know - it could be, and the symptoms are similar. Probably its strange that you have a cold, if no one else has in the middle of summer, or suffer from allergies and know the bad time for them in your area. But if you continue to have symptoms, try, but not always, treat allergies, worth a try.

If you have any symptoms for a while and disappeared for a week or two, it's probably a cold. If you believe that you get rid of your cold - for weeks, is probably allergies. If it gets worse in some places or environments (inside buildings, especially when it comes to indoor public places and not others, freshly cut grass comes, forest) is an allergy ProBaby. To see what you are allergic, you should consult a doctor and you have the test.

If you do not want to do that, try to hit to, or instead allegra claritin medicine for colds and see if it helps. These drugs block the things you are allergic, you are affecting so bad - that make you less sensitive to THem. Against cold medicines do not cure (there is no cure for the cold or not), giving you less unhappy.

banzai said...

not have the same symptoms - runny nose and sneezing is the only thing you have in common

a "is cold" by a rhinovirus that causes a micro --

Allergies are caused by a hypersensitivity immune response of the body to an external stimulus

There may be more a difference, it is likely that the environmental allergies (pollen, dust, mold, etc.)

Edit: uh .... not for the poster two posts below me, not too cold can be caused by allergies, I do not know wtf you have dug more, but that's not true ...

Post a Comment