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新冠患者出现和花粉过敏类似的症状,该如何区分?

新冠患者出现和花粉过敏类似的症状,该如何区分?

COLIN LODEWICK 2022-04-22
随着奥密克戎成为主要流行毒株,部分感染者的症状开始和花粉过敏变得十分相似。

有些人一到春天可能就会感到疲劳、嗓子难受、打喷嚏甚至喘不上气,不少人的反应还相当严重,而罪魁祸首往往是花粉。那么问题来了:你怎样分辨自己究竟是花粉过敏,还是得了奥密克戎?

最近美国又迎来了一波新冠肺炎确诊病例的激增,但同时春季也是过敏症的高发期,两者症状高度类似,让你难以分清自己究竟是过敏还是“阳”了。

掌握这个技能对于身在国外的小伙伴尤为重要。因为今年春天,美国已经将公卫限制下调到了疫情以来的最低水平。就在本周,佛罗里达的一位联邦法官推翻了疾控中心的口罩令,这意味着你在美国无论是坐飞机还是用Uber和Lyft叫网约车,都不会被强制要求佩戴口罩。最近的美国民调显示,很多人都觉得危机已经过去了。但这并不代表你的鼻窦会轻易地放过你。

今年春季的疫情/过敏季还出现了另一个特征,在过去两年里,新冠肺炎和花粉过敏的症状是有明显区别的,但今年随着奥密克戎成为主要流行毒株,二者的症状开始变得十分相似。

马萨诸塞州剑桥市奥本山医院的传染病科医生、哈佛大学医学院副教授罗宾·科尔格罗夫博士指出:“很多以为自己是花粉过敏的人很可能实际上感染了新冠。这对公共卫生带来的最直接的影响,就是他们可能会误以为自己没有传染性,而继续出入公共场所,且不戴口罩或保持社交距离。”

你有哪些症状?

哥伦比亚大学欧文医学中心鼻科主任兼纽约长老会医院神经科主任大卫·古迪斯博士对《财富》表示:“简而言之,过敏通常发生在免疫系统出现混乱的时候。”也就是说,人体有时会将柳絮、花粉等环境颗粒误认为一种威胁,一旦它们进入人体,就会启动免疫反应。

他指出,季节性过敏最常见的症状包括流鼻涕、打喷嚏、鼻塞、流泪、眼睛发痒、口鼻或喉部发痒、疲劳等,有时眼睛和鼻子周边也会出现肿胀或浮肿。

科尔格罗夫指出:“在疫情爆发的前一年半左右的时间里,新冠肺炎和季节性过敏的症状并不相像。”新冠的典型症状是发烧和呼吸短促,患者也可能会出现咳嗽、喉咙痛、肌肉疼痛、丧失嗅觉味觉等症状。但这些都不是季节性过敏的典型症状。

不过,一旦你对新冠有了抗体,不管是接种了疫苗,还是以前感染过,它的症状就会变得轻微许多,因此也就更难分辨。

另外,目前流行的奥密克戎毒株攻击人体的方式也和原始毒株有了很大不同,因此它的症状会更像普通的过敏反应。科尔格罗夫表示,密克戎更容易表现为上呼吸道感染,而不是攻击下呼吸道。因此,流鼻涕和嗓子疼已经成了更常见的新冠症状。

“所以,新冠与过敏的症状比以往更加相像。”他说。

如何分辨?

即便新冠与季节性过敏的症状高度重叠,二者也存在一些显著区别。古迪斯指出:“常规过敏一般不会出现发烧和持续性的咳嗽。”因此一旦出现这些症状,你可能并非只是对花粉过敏。

古迪斯还表示,过敏者的鼻涕通常是透明的水状分泌物,但新冠患者的鼻涕则有可能粘稠变色。另外新冠患者可能会咳痰,而过敏者最多只会干咳。

另外,虽然过敏和新冠都有可能导致嗅觉下降,但过敏患者的鼻塞缓解后会很快恢复嗅觉。而新冠患者即便没有鼻塞症状,也有可能出现嗅觉下降。

新冠的病程也是可以预测的,一般会持续两周左右。前五到七天症状会趋于严重,此后会逐步好转。然而在花粉浓度比较高的时期,过敏者的症状可能会持续数周之久。

最后古迪斯表示:“如果出现了气短、呼吸困难等症状,一定要认真对待,因为这些不太可能仅仅是由于过敏导致的。”

西北医学中心杜佩奇医院的过敏专科医生阿米娜·孔对《财富》表示,就算在疫情爆发以前,如何区分过敏和炎症也是一个常见问题,因为二者的症状尝尝会重叠。

她表示,父母要尤其注意婴幼儿的情况,特别是还无法接种新冠疫苗的婴幼儿。“我建议孩子一旦出现比较严重的症状,父母应立刻带孩子就医。孩子可能不会说清楚他们的症状,所以必须要通过检查才能知道他们是否感染了病毒。”(财富中文网)

译者:朴成奎

有些人一到春天可能就会感到疲劳、嗓子难受、打喷嚏甚至喘不上气,不少人的反应还相当严重,而罪魁祸首往往是花粉。那么问题来了:你怎样分辨自己究竟是花粉过敏,还是得了奥密克戎?

最近美国又迎来了一波新冠肺炎确诊病例的激增,但同时春季也是过敏症的高发期,两者症状高度类似,让你难以分清自己究竟是过敏还是“阳”了。

掌握这个技能对于身在国外的小伙伴尤为重要。因为今年春天,美国已经将公卫限制下调到了疫情以来的最低水平。就在本周,佛罗里达的一位联邦法官推翻了疾控中心的口罩令,这意味着你在美国无论是坐飞机还是用Uber和Lyft叫网约车,都不会被强制要求佩戴口罩。最近的美国民调显示,很多人都觉得危机已经过去了。但这并不代表你的鼻窦会轻易地放过你。

今年春季的疫情/过敏季还出现了另一个特征,在过去两年里,新冠肺炎和花粉过敏的症状是有明显区别的,但今年随着奥密克戎成为主要流行毒株,二者的症状开始变得十分相似。

马萨诸塞州剑桥市奥本山医院的传染病科医生、哈佛大学医学院副教授罗宾·科尔格罗夫博士指出:“很多以为自己是花粉过敏的人很可能实际上感染了新冠。这对公共卫生带来的最直接的影响,就是他们可能会误以为自己没有传染性,而继续出入公共场所,且不戴口罩或保持社交距离。”

你有哪些症状

哥伦比亚大学欧文医学中心鼻科主任兼纽约长老会医院神经科主任大卫·古迪斯博士对《财富》表示:“简而言之,过敏通常发生在免疫系统出现混乱的时候。”也就是说,人体有时会将柳絮、花粉等环境颗粒误认为一种威胁,一旦它们进入人体,就会启动免疫反应。

他指出,季节性过敏最常见的症状包括流鼻涕、打喷嚏、鼻塞、流泪、眼睛发痒、口鼻或喉部发痒、疲劳等,有时眼睛和鼻子周边也会出现肿胀或浮肿。

科尔格罗夫指出:“在疫情爆发的前一年半左右的时间里,新冠肺炎和季节性过敏的症状并不相像。”新冠的典型症状是发烧和呼吸短促,患者也可能会出现咳嗽、喉咙痛、肌肉疼痛、丧失嗅觉味觉等症状。但这些都不是季节性过敏的典型症状。

不过,一旦你对新冠有了抗体,不管是接种了疫苗,还是以前感染过,它的症状就会变得轻微许多,因此也就更难分辨。

另外,目前流行的奥密克戎毒株攻击人体的方式也和原始毒株有了很大不同,因此它的症状会更像普通的过敏反应。科尔格罗夫表示,密克戎更容易表现为上呼吸道感染,而不是攻击下呼吸道。因此,流鼻涕和嗓子疼已经成了更常见的新冠症状。

“所以,新冠与过敏的症状比以往更加相像。”他说。

如何分辨?

即便新冠与季节性过敏的症状高度重叠,二者也存在一些显著区别。古迪斯指出:“常规过敏一般不会出现发烧和持续性的咳嗽。”因此一旦出现这些症状,你可能并非只是对花粉过敏。

古迪斯还表示,过敏者的鼻涕通常是透明的水状分泌物,但新冠患者的鼻涕则有可能粘稠变色。另外新冠患者可能会咳痰,而过敏者最多只会干咳。

另外,虽然过敏和新冠都有可能导致嗅觉下降,但过敏患者的鼻塞缓解后会很快恢复嗅觉。而新冠患者即便没有鼻塞症状,也有可能出现嗅觉下降。

新冠的病程也是可以预测的,一般会持续两周左右。前五到七天症状会趋于严重,此后会逐步好转。然而在花粉浓度比较高的时期,过敏者的症状可能会持续数周之久。

最后古迪斯表示:“如果出现了气短、呼吸困难等症状,一定要认真对待,因为这些不太可能仅仅是由于过敏导致的。”

西北医学中心杜佩奇医院的过敏专科医生阿米娜·孔对《财富》表示,就算在疫情爆发以前,如何区分过敏和炎症也是一个常见问题,因为二者的症状尝尝会重叠。

她表示,父母要尤其注意婴幼儿的情况,特别是还无法接种新冠疫苗的婴幼儿。“我建议孩子一旦出现比较严重的症状,父母应立刻带孩子就医。孩子可能不会说清楚他们的症状,所以必须要通过检查才能知道他们是否感染了病毒。”(财富中文网)

译者:朴成奎

Something’s in the air this spring that’s making people wheeze and sneeze. It can make you fatigued, irritate your throat, and generally bog you down. But there’s a nagging question in early 2022: Is it pollen…or COVID?

The newest COVID surge in the U.S. is lining up with peak spring allergy season, and both conditions can manifest with the same symptoms, making it harder to tell whether you’re contagious or just suffering because you’ve been outside.

It’s especially tricky in 2022, since the third allergy season of the pandemic is by far the one with the fewest public health restrictions in the U.S. This week, major airlines along with Uber and Lyft made masking optional after a federal judge in Florida struck down the CDC’s federal mandate. And more people than ever are saying that the pandemic isn’t a crisis anymore, according to recent polling. That won’t help you tell if your sinuses are suffering or if it’s something else.

Another wrinkle in this year’s COVID/allergy season: the symptoms of the two maladies, which used to be clearly distinct, have started to bleed together.

“It's quite possible that people could have what they think are allergy symptoms and actually have COVID,” Dr. Robin C. Colgrove, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard who works in the infectious disease division at Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, Mass., told Fortune. “The obvious public health implication is that they could be walking around, not realizing that they’re contagious, and not distancing or masking.”

Which symptoms do you have?

“In simple terms, allergies generally occur when the immune system gets confused,” Dr. David Gudis, chief of the division of rhinology at Columbia’s Irving Medical Center/NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital’s department of neurologic surgery, told Fortune. The body, he says, can misinterpret environmental particles like tree and grass pollen as threats and initiate an immune response against them after they enter the body.

He outlines the most common symptoms for seasonal allergies: “runny nose, sneezing, nasal congestion, watery or itchy eyes, itchy nose, mouth, or throat, fatigue, and sometimes swelling or puffiness around the nose and eyes.”

“For the first year and a half of the pandemic, [COVID and seasonal allergies] were pretty much nothing like one another,” says Colgrove. The typical symptoms of COVID were fever and shortness of breath, but could also include coughing, sore throat, muscle aches, and loss of smell and taste—none of which are typical for seasonal allergies.

However, COVID symptoms are often more mild and therefore harder to pin down in people who have some form of resistance to the virus, whether through vaccination or previous infection.

The most recent Omicron variant also attacks the body differently than the original virus, leading to symptoms more in line with those of a common allergic reaction. Omicron “seems to be manifesting as an infection in the upper airways rather than lower airways,” says Colgrove. As a result, sore throat and runny nose have become more common COVID symptoms.

“The symptoms have started to overlap more than they were earlier in the pandemic,” he says.

Distinguishing between the two

There are key distinctions between the symptoms of COVID and seasonal allergies, even when there seems to be significant overlap. “Fevers and persistent coughing are uncommon symptoms for routine allergies,” says Gudis, and should therefore be the first indicator that your condition is not just the result of seasonal allergies.

He adds that nasal discharge from allergies is typically clear and watery for allergies, but thicker or discolored in response to the coronavirus. A cough associated with COVID is likely to bring up mucus or phlegm, while allergies provoke a dry cough, if any.

“While both allergies and COVID can result in decreased sense of smell, people with allergies will tend to notice that their sense of smell improves when their nasal congestion goes down. On the other hand, COVID can result in a decreased sense of smell even in the absence of nasal congestion or obstruction,” he says.

COVID also follows a predictable course of approximately two weeks, worsening steadily for the first five to seven days before gradually getting better, whereas “allergies, unfortunately, persist for a few weeks while pollen counts are high.”

“Any symptoms like shortness of breath or difficulty breathing should be taken very seriously, as these are unlikely to be due to allergies alone,” he says.

Dr. Amiinah Kung, an allergist at Northwestern Medical Central DuPage Hospital, told Fortune that differentiating between allergies and infections was a common question even before the pandemic because of symptom overlap.

Kung says that it’s especially important now for parents to take extra precautions with young children, who still have not been approved for a vaccine. “I would indicate to parents that they really should get kids checked out as soon as they can if they have any concerns about symptoms,” she says. “It's harder for kids to tell us their symptoms, so being able to examine them tells us if there's signs of an actual virus.”

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