What are colds?
Everyone gets a cold from time to time. Children get more colds than adults.
Colds usually last 1 to 2 weeks. You can catch a cold at any time of year, but they are more common in late winter and early spring.
There is no cure for a cold. Antibiotics will not cure a cold. If you catch a cold, treat the symptoms.
Lots of different viruses cause colds, but the symptoms are usually the same:
You will probably feel a cold come on over the course of a couple of days. As the cold gets worse, your nose may get stuffy with thicker mucus.
A cold is not the same as the flu. Flu symptoms are worse and come on faster. If you have the flu, you may feel very tired. You may also have a fever and shaking chills, lots of aches and pains, a headache, and a cough.
If you feel like you have a cold all the time, or if cold symptoms last more than 2 weeks, you may have allergies or sinusitis. Call your doctor.
Good home treatment of a cold can help you feel better. When you get a cold:
Using a product containing zinc may help shorten the length of your cold by up to a day.1 But you have to take the zinc as soon as you have any cold symptoms. In some cases, zinc products that you spray or place into your nose can cause permanent loss of the sense of smell.2
Don't take cold medicine that uses several drugs to treat different symptoms. For example, don't take medicine that contains both a decongestant for a stuffy nose and a cough medicine. Treat each symptom on its own.
A nasal decongestant spray can help your stuffy nose, but make sure you don't use it for more than 3 days in a row. You could get a "rebound" effect, which makes the mucous membranes in your nose swell up even more.
Be careful with cough and cold medicines. They may not be safe for young children or for people who have certain health problems, so check the label first. If you do use these medicines, always follow the directions about how much to use based on age and weight. Cough and cold medicines may help with symptoms, but they don't help you get better faster. For more information, see the topic Quick Tips: Giving Over-the-Counter Medicines to Children.
Call your doctor if:
There are several things you can do to help prevent colds:
Citations
| By | Healthwise Staff |
|---|---|
| Primary Medical Reviewer | David Messenger, MD |
| Specialist Medical Reviewer | Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine |
| Last Revised | May 24, 2011 |
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ReferencesLast Revised: May 24, 2011
Author: Healthwise Staff
Medical Review: David Messenger, MD & Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine
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