Science Common cold can 'boot out' Coronavirus - Worse than the flu my arse!

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The virus that causes the common cold can effectively boot the Covid virus out of the body's cells, say researchers.

Some viruses are known to compete in order to be the one that causes an infection.

And University of Glasgow scientists say it appears cold-causing rhinovirus trumps coronavirus.

The benefits might be short-lived but rhinovirus is so widespread, they add, it could still help to suppress Covid.

Think of the cells in your nose, throat and lungs as being like a row of houses. Once a virus gets inside, it can either hold the door open to let in other viruses, or it can nail the door shut and keep its new home to itself.

Influenza is one of the most selfish viruses around, and nearly always infects alone. Others, such as adenoviruses, seem to be more up for a houseshare.

There has been much speculation about how the virus that causes Covid, known as Sars-CoV-2, would fit into the mysterious world of "virus-virus interactions".

The challenge for scientists is that a year of social distancing has slowed the spread of all viruses and made it much harder to study.

Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Virus nose graphic

The team at the Centre for Virus Research in Glasgow used a replica of the lining of our airways, made out of the same types of cells, and infected it with Sars-CoV-2 and rhinovirus, which is one of the most widespread infections in people, and a cause of the common cold.

If rhinovirus and Sars-CoV-2 were released at the same time, only rhinovirus is successful. If rhinovirus had a 24-hour head start then Sars-CoV-2 does not get a look in. And even when Sars-CoV-2 had 24-hours to get started, rhinovirus boots it out.

"Sars-CoV-2 never takes off, it is heavily inhibited by rhinovirus," Dr Pablo Murcia told BBC News.

He added: "This is absolutely exciting because if you have a high prevalence of rhinovirus, it could stop new Sars-CoV-2 infections."

Similar effects have been seen before. A large rhinovirus outbreak may have delayed the 2009 swine flu pandemic in parts of Europe.

Further experiments showed rhinovirus was triggering an immune response inside the infected cells, which blocked the ability of Sars-CoV-2 to make copies of itself.

When scientists blocked the immune response, then levels of the Covid virus were the same as if rhinovirus was not there.

'Hard winter' ahead​

However, Covid would be able to cause an infection again once the cold had passed and the immune response calmed down.

Dr Murcia said: "Vaccination, plus hygiene measures, plus the interactions between viruses could lower the incidence of Sars-CoV-2 heavily, but the maximum effect will come from vaccination."

Prof Lawrence Young, of Warwick Medical School, said human rhinoviruses, the most frequent cause of the common cold, were "highly transmissible".

He added that this study suggests "that this common infection could impact the burden of Covid-19 and influence the spread of SarsCoV2, particularly over the autumn and winter months when seasonal colds are more frequent".

Exactly how all this settles down in future winters is still unknown. Coronavirus is likely to still be around, and all the other infections that have been suppressed during the pandemic could bounce back as immunity to them wanes.

Dr Susan Hopkins, from Public Health England, has already warned of a "hard winter" as a result.

"We could see surges in flu. We could see surges in other respiratory viruses and other respiratory pathogens," she said,

The results have been published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases.
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If true, these researchers have just essentially said that lockdowns basically fucked us all and prepare for another heavy flu season.
 
Remember that usual winter flu thing that's been around for 80 years, and how it was just turned off like tap water for the Coof coverage this winter? Hmm, makes the goyim think. Lockdowns of the healthy will continue until the plebs rebel against tyranny.
 
"Vaccination, plus hygiene measures, plus the interactions between viruses could lower the incidence of Sars-CoV-2 heavily, but the maximum effect will come from vaccination."
Mm, yeah
 
Remember that usual winter flu thing that's been around for 80 years, and how it was just turned off like tap water for the Coof coverage this winter? Hmm, makes the goyim think. Lockdowns of the healthy will continue until the plebs rebel against tyranny.
Ya know the measures taken to prevent the spread of covid (masks, social distancing, etc...) also work for the flu, right?
 
So all the antivaxers will volunteer to have rhinovirus squirted up their noses? Will they take their kids to cold parties and encourage them to sneeze on each other?
 
Realistically speaking we're just 1-2 months away from Scientists and Doctors announcing that AIDS can beat coronavirus and the best way to stop old people from dying of natural causes is by making everyone get raped in the ass by AIDS infested faggots
 
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So this is why the homeless aren't dying to this shit. They have infections that kicked COVID out of the house.
 
Remember when the coronavirus was so bad that chinese people were just dropping dead in the streets?
 
Which common cold virus do they mean? All of them? One of them? BBC science reporting is shit.
 
I swear to god if this turns into a "oh the flu vaccine works far better than the covid vaccine on covid" spiel I am going to be so annoyed at the ensuing media autism.
 
Rhinovirus> AHAHAHHAHAHA! I have spent tens of thousands of years perfecting my ability to infect and be spread by humans.
The Vid> Me so sneaky me play joke me go pee pee in you coke! China Virus Numbah One!
Rhinovirus> You what now?
<The Vid has been booted from the server>
 
That goalpost looks heavy, need help moving it?
Which rhinovirus is it, then? Rhinovirus isn't a single virus. Is it all species? All serotypes? No, the article does a half-assed job at best.
 
So all the antivaxers will volunteer to have rhinovirus squirted up their noses? Will they take their kids to cold parties and encourage them to sneeze on each other?
Given that chicken pox parties are still a thing despite a vaccine being available for it, I wouldn't put it past them.
 
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