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1 iral upper-respiratory-tract infections (the common cold).
2 respiratory tract infections (including the common cold).
3 ytotoxicity by rhinoviruses, which cause the common cold.
4 experiencing at least 2 of 9 symptoms of the common cold.
5 ruses and monitored for the development of a common cold.
6 ntly reduced the duration of symptoms of the common cold.
7 inoviruses are the most common causes of the common cold.
8 described in the 1960s for patients with the common cold.
9 prescribe antibiotics for patients with the common cold.
10 , B, and C species are defined agents of the common cold.
11 ecretion, and/or sneezing without having the common cold.
12 lation and assessment of signs/symptoms of a common cold.
13 meningitis, encephalitis, hepatitis, and the common cold.
14 alogy to the atmospheric transmission of the common cold.
15 in various diseases, including polio and the common cold.
16 Echinacea is widely used to treat the common cold.
17 on to substantively change the course of the common cold.
18 gical agents of asthma exacerbations and the common cold.
19 r harm in these college students who had the common cold.
20 ea preparations are widely used to treat the common cold.
21 oviruses (HRVs), is a causative agent of the common cold.
22 Rhinoviruses are a frequent cause of the common cold.
23 f of rhinorrhea and sneezing associated with common colds.
24 rhinovirus (RV) infection and RV-associated common colds.
25 the vitamin E group had a lower incidence of common cold (0.67 vs 0.81 per person-year; RR, 0.83; 95%
26 tics were prescribed to 44% of patients with common colds, 46% with URIs, and 75% with bronchitis.
27 nted with a nonbacterial AURI, including the common cold (53.4%), acute bronchitis (31.3%), acute sin
28 stribution modelling, to investigate how two common cold-adapted bird species, willow and rock ptarmi
29 tudies have demonstrated higher rates of the common cold among persons working in buildings that reci
30 e family are the most frequent cause for the common cold and a major factor in the exacerbation of ch
33 le of 1981 adults seen by physicians for the common cold and nonspecific upper respiratory tract infe
34 tibiotic, including 51% of patients with the common cold and nonspecific URTIs, 53% with acute sinusi
36 ed insight into pathogenic mechanisms of the common cold and their role in chronic RT illness and has
38 rk for anticipating the seasonal dynamics of common colds and the associated risks for asthmatics.
39 irus (RV) is responsible for the majority of common colds and triggers exacerbations of asthma and ch
40 iagnosed as having a URI or nasopharyngitis (common cold), and 4.7 million (9% of all prescriptions f
41 erimentally exposed to a virus that causes a common cold, and monitored for 5 d for the development o
42 al improvement after initial symptoms of the common cold, and often associated with facial or dental
44 , the most important etiologic agents of the common cold, are messenger-active single-stranded monoci
45 picornavirus family, is a major cause of the common cold as well as asthma and chronic obstructive pu
46 tory viruses are frequent causes of repeated common colds, bronchitis and pneumonia, which often occu
48 been widely used as an herbal remedy for the common cold, but efficacy studies have produced conflict
49 s show no association with prevention of the common cold, but exploratory meta-analysis suggests that
50 d classes of infectious agents and cause the common cold, cancer, AIDS and other serious health threa
51 n in human subjects with naturally occurring common colds caused by rhinovirus and found a 4.9-fold i
52 We report the evolution of variants of the common-cold-causing coxsackievirus A21, an EV with tropi
53 and air quality measures are available, but common cold circulation is not; therefore, we generate e
56 Human rhinovirus, the chief cause of the common cold, contains a positive-sense strand of RNA whi
57 V), which is responsible for the majority of common colds, disrupts airway epithelial barrier functio
58 (RV), a virus responsible for a majority of common colds, disrupts the barrier function of the airwa
59 ed within 24 h of developing symptoms of the common cold for a randomized, double-blind, placebo-cont
61 No consistently effective therapy for the common cold has been well documented, but evidence sugge
64 ," "pharyngitis," "rhinosinusitis," and "the common cold." HIGH-VALUE CARE ADVICE 1: Clinicians shoul
65 lozenges have been used for treatment of the common cold; however, the results remain controversial.
66 coronavirus HCoV-OC43 (OC43; an agent of the common cold), human enteric coronavirus (HECoV), equine
67 As the predominant aetiological agent of the common cold, human rhinovirus (HRV) is the leading cause
71 (HRV) accounts for a significant portion of common-cold illness, with the peak incidence being in th
72 nt effect of probiotics on the occurrence of common cold illnesses in children, and studies in animal
79 and other respiratory tract viruses lead to common colds in most infants, whereas a minority develop
81 n may help determine the clinical outcome of common cold infections, raising the possibility that the
84 with a range of respiratory illnesses, from common cold-like symptoms to serious lower respiratory t
85 rus (HRV) infections are associated with the common cold, occasionally with more serious lower respir
86 one car accident [in the control group], two common cold [one patient per group], three gastrointesti
87 ARTI, ranging from 46% of patients with the common cold or nonspecific URTIs to 69% of patients with
90 and predictably drives seasonal variation in common cold prevalence, which results in the "back-to-sc
91 ypes of social ties were less susceptible to common colds, produced less mucus, were more effective i
92 nst the rhinovirus (HRV) responsible for the common cold remains a challenge because there are over 1
94 tomy, measles, hepatitis A, rheumatic fever, common colds, rubella and chronic sinus infection, in ov
95 ral pathologies ranging in severity from the common cold sore to life-threatening encephalitic infect
96 The effect of treatment on the severity of common cold symptoms cannot be accurately assessed with
97 the efficacy of any therapy for treatment of common cold symptoms in children less than 6 years of ag
103 OC43, one of the major etiological agents of common cold, through the induction of IFN-inducible tran
105 for broad-spectrum antibiotics were for the common cold, unspecified upper respiratory tract infecti
106 A in purity assessment of a preparation of a common cold virus (human rhinovirus serotype 2, HRV-A2)
107 ooms), administered nasal drops containing a common cold virus (rhinovirus 39), and monitored for 5 d
109 y, infection of Ramos cells with rhinovirus (common cold virus) serotypes 14 and 16 resulted in the i
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