Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
Cold, viruses WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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runny nose, cough, sore throat, and sneezing that advertise that
you have a cold. More than 200 viruses, each with its own
favored method of being passed from one person to another,
its own gestation period, each different from the others, wait
patiently to invade the mucous membranes that line the nose
of the next cold victim.
Passing the cold-causing virus from one person to the
next can be done by sneezing onto the person, by shaking
hands, or by an object handled by the infected person and
picked up by the next victim. Oddly, direct contact with the
infected person, as in kissing, is not an efficient way for the
virus to spread. Only in about 10% of such contacts does the
uninfected person get the virus. Walking around in a cold rain
will not cause a cold. Viruses like warm, moist surroundings,
so they thrive indoors in winter. Colds are easily passed in the
winter, because people spend more time indoors then than they
do outdoors. However, being outdoors in cold weather can
dehydrate the mucous membranes in the nose and make them
more susceptible to infection by a rhinovirus.
In addition, cold-causing viruses mutate with regularity.
Each time it is passed from one person to the next, the virus

changes slightly, so it is not the virus the first person had.
Viruses are obligate parasites, meaning that they can carry out
their functions only when they invade another living cell.
The virus has a tough envelope surrounding its nucleic
acids, the genetic material for any living thing. Once it invades
the body, the virus waits to be placed in the location in which
it can function best. Once there, it attaches to a cell by means
of receptor areas on its envelope and on the cell membrane.
The viral nucleic acid then is inserted into the cell nucleusand
it takes over the functions of the nucleus, telling it to repro-
duce viruses.
Taking regular doses of vitamin C will not ward off a
cold. However, high doses of vitamin C once a person has a
cold may help to alleviate symptoms and reduce discomfort.
Over-the-counter drugs to treat colds treat only the symptoms.
They may dry up the patient’s runny nose, but after a few days
the nose will compensate and overcome the effects of the med-
ication and begin to drip again. The runny nose is from the loss
of plasma from the blood vessels in the nose. Some researchers
assert the nose drip is a defensive mechanism to prevent the
invasion of other viruses. Antibioticssuch as penicillinare use-
less against the cold because they do not affect viruses.
Scientists agree that the old wives’ remedy of chicken
soup can help the cold victim, but so can any other hot liquid.
The steam and heat produced by soup or tea helps to liquefy the
mucus in the sinus cavities, allowing them to drain, reducing
the pressure and making the patient feel better. The remedy is
temporary and has no effect on the virus. Colds are usually
self-limiting, and recovery usually occurs within a week.

See alsoCold, viruses; Infection and resistance; Viruses and
responses to viral infection

CCold, virusesOLD, VIRUSES

The cold is one of the most common illnesses of humans. In
the Unites States alone, there are more than one billion colds
each year. Typically a cold produces sneezing, scratchy throat,
and a runny nose for one or two weeks. The causes of the com-
moncoldare viruses.
More than 200 different viruses can cause a cold.
Rhinoviruses account for anywhere from 35% to over half of
all colds, particularly in younger and older people. This has
likely been the case for millennia. Indeed, the name
Rhinovirus is from the Greek word rhin, meaning, “nose.”
There are over one hundred different types of Rhinovirus,
based on the different proteins that are on the surface of the
virus particle. Rhinovirus belongs to the virus family
Picornaviridae. The genetic material of the virus is ribonucleic
acid(RNA) and the genome is of a very small size.
Rhinovirus is spread from one person to another by “hand
to hand” contact, that is, by physical contact or from one person
sneezing close by another person. The virus needs to inside the
human body to be able to replicate. The internal temperature of
the body, which is normally between 97–99°F (36.1–37.2° C) is
perfect for Rhinovirus. If the temperature varies only a few
degrees either way of the window, the virus will not replicate.

Sneezing is a symptom of the common cold.

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