About Rhinoviruses | Rhinoviruses | CDC Most rhinovirus infections are mild, but they can cause serious illness in higher-risk populations There is no vaccine, treatment, or medicine to prevent or cure illness caused by rhinoviruses
How Serious Is a Rhinovirus Infection? - MedicineNet Rhinovirus is more likely to cause severe lung infections, such as pneumonia and bronchitis, only in babies and children who were born prematurely or have heart disease or asthma Rhinovirus infections are often life-threatening among high-risk people with cancer
Rhinovirus: Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis, and Treatment This article explains what rhinovirus is, the symptoms, how doctors diagnose the condition, the treatment options available, and other illnesses that are a result or complication of rhinovirus
Rhinovirus - Wikipedia Rhinoviruses are the primary cause of the common cold Symptoms include sore throat, runny nose, nasal congestion, sneezing and cough; sometimes accompanied by muscle aches, fatigue, malaise, headache, muscle weakness, or loss of appetite
Common Cold (Rhinovirus): Symptoms, Causes Treatment Researchers found that when cooler air lowered nose temperature, mouse immune systems had a harder time stopping the rhinovirus from multiplying The same may be true in humans
Rhinovirus — symptoms, treatment | healthdirect Rhinovirus causes the common cold, it has mild symptoms but can be serious in some people Learn more about rhinovirus symptoms and treatment
Rhinovirus Infections - HealthyChildren. org Rhinoviruses may also cause some sore throats, ear infections, and infections of the sinuses (openings in the bone near the nose and eyes) They may also cause pneumonia and bronchiolitis, but this is less common Most children have about 8 to 10 colds during the first 2 years of life
How Serious Is the Rhinovirus? - eMedicineHealth The common cold is most frequently caused by a rhinovirus Rhinovirus infections typically cause mild upper respiratory tract illness that goes away on its own within 1 to 2 weeks
Rhinovirus | Common cold, Respiratory infection, Airborne virus . . . respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), infectious agent of the respiratory system that typically produces a mild cold like illness but in susceptible individuals, particularly infants under six months of age, is a major cause of severe and potentially fatal lower respiratory disease