A 1975 paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association, for instance, showed that people infected with
a common cold virus called the rhinovirus shed more virus particles if they were treated with aspirin than untreated patients.
Not exact matches
(Similarly, a species
called human betacoronavirus 1 contains both OC43, a human
common cold virus, and a bovine coronavirus.)
Early in - the - body gene therapies used a
virus called adenovirus — the
virus behind the
common cold — but the agent can cause an immune response from the body, putting a patient at risk of further illness.
Similar to the
common cold in humans, kennel cough can be caused by several different
viruses (such as canine distemper, canine parainfluenza
virus, or canine coronavirus) or, more commonly, by bacteria
called Bordatella bronchiseptica.