My basic research has shown that it can in many ways. Try www.wrongdiagnosis.com/sym/muscle_aches.htm for more answers.
Inside the cells of the host. Viruses can't reproduce without a host's body to do the work and provide the materials for replication. Most cold viruses first attack the mucous tissues, attach to and enter these cells and then force the cell to stop doing its usual job and begin slaving for the virus. The process is called the Lytic cycle, see the related questions below for more information.
A cold sore is caused by a virus.
The herpes that causes cold sores remains in the nervous system and is reactivated from time to time. The sore reappears at this time. A cold virus doesn't act this way in the nervous system. Once a person has a cold, that person makes enough antibodies so that the virus doesn't cause a cold again in that person.
Bacteria,fungi,or parasitic worms invade the human body.
Cold and flu are caused by viruses, while AIDS is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which attacks the immune system.
Inside the cells of the host. Viruses can't reproduce without a host's body to do the work and provide the materials for replication. Most cold viruses first attack the mucous tissues, attach to and enter these cells and then force the cell to stop doing its usual job and begin slaving for the virus. The process is called the Lytic cycle, see the related questions below for more information.
I know I'm fat and I like it. i am a blood cell
Depends on the density of the population in the area and weather (sometimes) and the how lethal the virus is. If a virus is dangerous enough to be called a pandemic, then it would have to have a good way of spreading like airborne or waterborne or carried by insects etc etc. MY OPINION is that if there were no cure for cold but people continued their normal lives, I am guessing that the whole US will get a case of cold in less than two years.
Ok, the common cold virus has little things around it that look like keys. The virus enters your respiratory tract, like the nose or mouth and goes to a cell, the little key-things try to open big proteins on a cell tha looks like a lock then, the molecules or organelles in a cell welcome the virus. When the virus enters the nucleus of the cell it goes to a "factory" and it uses our DNA to copy its own DNA, and it keeps reproducing until there are millions of them but luckily we have our immune system, white cells, and they "eat" the virus.
takes over another cell and control it and it tells it to reproduce
The virus attaches to the host cells membrane.
The common cold virus, primarily caused by rhinoviruses, typically uses a lytic cycle of replication. In this cycle, the virus attaches to host cells and injects its RNA genome, which hijacks the host's cellular machinery to replicate and produce viral proteins. As new viral particles are assembled, they eventually burst from the host cell, leading to cell death and the spread of the virus to infect additional cells. This rapid replication and cell lysis contribute to the symptoms of the common cold.
"Viruses replicate inside the cell and then burst out of the cell." Hope this helps. Got this from Apex.
Antibiotics work against bacterial infections only. They either prevent the bacteria from multiplying or they affect the cell contents of the bacteria and stop the bacteria from constructing their cell wall. However, antibiotics won't work against cold because common cold is caused by a virus. Since virus contains only RNA and is non-living outside host cell, i.e.,there is no cell wall in viruses. so, antibiotics do not work against them. Therefore, it is not advisable to have antibiotics to fight off a cold.
active virus
Yes a virus does cause the common cold.
When you have a cold virus, your body starts to produce more mucus to catch the viruses and it increases the temperature to make it too uncomfortable for the virus to multiply. Therefore, it disrupts it by causing your body to increase its temperature and produce more mucus.