Who knows why different people have different symptoms with the common cold? Well, a new study used laboratory-grown noses ...
A new study shows the intricacies of the cold virus and how it interacts with nasal airway cells, revealing why some people ...
When a rhinovirus, the most frequent cause of the common cold, infects the lining of our nasal passages, our cells work ...
This brings new meaning to under the weather. With flu cases climbing this winter season rapidly and record low temps on the ...
A new study shows that the body’s early immune response, not the virus itself, often determines how severe a rhinovirus cold ...
A new study suggests the answer may come down to what happens inside your snoot. Researchers found that how cells in the ...
Learn how the body’s earliest immune defenses can stop a common cold before symptoms appear.
A new study helps explain why you get sick from a common cold virus. The secret, it turns out, lies inside your nose.
Your chances of catching a cold—and how miserable it feels—may depend more on your body than on the virus itself.
Health officials say multiple respiratory illnesses are circulating in Iowa, with flu, COVID-19, and RSV activity all ...
A study published 30 years ago is striking up new conversation about the potential connection between the common cold sore and Alzheimer’s disease. Published in The Lancet in 1997, researchers ...