Pulmonology focuses on diagnosing and treating lung and airway conditions such as asthma, COPD, and pneumonia, as well as overall respiratory health.
Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.
Common cold symptoms usually begin gradually. Many patients first notice a scratchy throat, sneezing, or a runny nose before congestion and cough become more noticeable.
A cold may feel mild, but it can still disturb sleep, work, school, travel, and daily comfort. Symptoms may also look similar to flu, COVID-19, allergy, sinusitis, or early bronchitis.
At Liv Hospital, doctors evaluate symptom timing, fever pattern, nasal findings, cough, risk factors, and possible complications together.
Nasal symptoms are often the most visible part of a common cold. They may change over several days as the immune system responds to the virus.
Nasal symptoms may include:
Yellow or green mucus does not always mean a bacterial infection. It can happen when immune cells collect in the mucus during a viral illness.
If nasal symptoms are severe, one-sided, or last longer than expected, medical evaluation may help rule out sinus infection or allergy.
A sore or scratchy throat may be one of the first signs of a cold. It often feels raw, dry, or irritated rather than sharply painful.
Throat and voice symptoms may include:
Hoarseness can appear when inflammation reaches the voice box. Cough may develop later as mucus drains from the nose into the throat.
Patients who want to learn how doctors separate cold symptoms from strep throat, flu, COVID-19, or sinus disease can visit the Common Cold Diagnosis and Evaluation section.
A cold mainly affects the nose and throat, but cough can appear as the illness progresses. This often happens because postnasal drip irritates the throat.
Cough may be:
A mild cough can be part of a cold. However, shortness of breath, chest pain, wheezing, high fever, or symptoms that worsen after improving should be checked.
For safe symptom relief and medication decisions, patients can visit the Common Cold Treatment and Management section.
The common cold can make the whole body feel tired, even when the infection is mostly in the upper airways.
General symptoms may include:
High fever and severe body aches are more typical of flu than a simple cold. This difference matters because flu and COVID-19 may need testing or early treatment in higher-risk patients.
At Liv Hospital, doctors review general symptoms together with respiratory findings to decide whether further evaluation is needed.
Children often catch colds more frequently because they are still building immunity to many respiratory viruses. Close contact in school or daycare also increases exposure.
Risk may be higher in:
Adults usually have fewer colds than children, but older adults may have a higher risk of complications.
If symptoms last longer than expected or become stronger in a high-risk patient, medical support should not be delayed.
Some lifestyle and environmental conditions make cold viruses easier to catch or symptoms harder to tolerate.
Risk may increase with:
Smoke can irritate the nose, throat, and airways. Dry air may also make nasal passages feel more blocked or uncomfortable.
Patients who want to reduce spread and support recovery can visit the Common Cold Recovery and Prevention section
A common cold can be more challenging for patients with chronic medical conditions. Viral inflammation may worsen existing respiratory or heart-related problems.
Higher-risk conditions may include:
In patients with asthma or COPD, a cold can trigger wheezing, breathlessness, or flare-ups.
Liv Hospital evaluates these risks carefully so patients understand whether their symptoms are expected or need closer monitoring.
Colds can happen in any season, but many respiratory viruses spread more easily during colder months because people spend more time indoors.
Seasonal factors may include:
Cold weather itself is not the only cause. The main issue is viral exposure, indoor crowding, and airway irritation from dry air.
A clear prevention plan can help reduce repeated infections and protect vulnerable family members.
Common cold care should be simple, safe, and focused on the right level of support. Not every cold needs testing, but some symptoms should be reviewed carefully.
Liv Hospital supports patients with physician evaluation, respiratory assessment, medication guidance, testing when needed, and coordinated care if flu, COVID-19, sinusitis, bronchitis, pneumonia, asthma, or COPD flare-up is suspected.
For international patients, Liv Hospital can assist with appointment planning, communication support, diagnostic coordination, treatment review, and follow-up guidance.
If cold-like symptoms are severe, prolonged, confusing, or affecting travel and daily comfort, Liv Hospital can help guide the next step.
Cold symptoms usually improve with supportive care, but warning signs should not be ignored.
Contact Liv Hospital if symptoms last longer than expected, breathing becomes difficult, fever continues, cough worsens, or you have a chronic condition that may increase complication risk.
Liv Hospital Ulus
Prof. MD. Ferah Ece
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ulus
Spec. MD. Mehmet Aydoğan
Respirology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Assoc. Prof. MD. Ömer Ayten
Respirology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Prof. MD. Cengiz Özdemir
Respirology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Prof. MD. Levent Dalar
Respirology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Assoc. Prof. MD. Akın Yıldızhan
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Asst. Prof. MD. Aysu Sinem Koç
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Asst. Prof. MD. Zeynep Atam Taşdemir
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Adalet Demir
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Adil Can Güngen
Respirology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Cemal Asım Kutlu
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Op. MD. Semih Buluklu
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Spec. MD. Gudrat Badalov
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Prof. MD. Kudret Ekiz
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Berna Botan Yıldırım
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Burça Takar
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Didem Katar
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Mine Önal
Respirology
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Prof. MD. İbrahim Can Kürkçüoğlu
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Spec. MD. Yeliz Karakan
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Spec. MD. İsmail Doğan
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Samsun
Spec. MD. Aziz Uluışık
Respirology
Liv Hospital Samsun
Spec. MD. Saliha Ercan Bütün
Pulmonology
Liv Bona Dea Hospital Bakü
Spec. MD. FİRUZ MEMMEDOV
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Ulus + Liv Hospital Vadistanbul + Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Erkan Çakır
Pediatric Respirology
Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.
Common symptoms include runny nose, nasal congestion, sneezing, sore throat, cough, headache, mild tiredness, and sometimes low-grade fever.
Mucus can change color when immune cells collect in the nasal discharge. This color change does not always mean a bacterial infection or the need for antibiotics.
A mild fever can occur, especially in children. High fever, fever lasting several days, or fever that returns after improvement should be medically evaluated.
Young children, older adults, people with asthma, COPD, heart disease, weak immune systems, or chronic medical conditions may have a higher risk of complications.
You can contact Liv Hospital if symptoms are severe, breathing becomes difficult, fever continues, cough worsens, or cold-like symptoms do not improve as expected.
BlogCommon ColdMay 22, 2026We explain rhinovirus in infants, a common cause of colds. Understand symptoms, duration, and care to suppo...
BlogCommon ColdMay 22, 2026We explain allergies vs common cold symptoms, highlighting differences in causes, duration, and treatment t...
BlogCommon ColdMay 22, 2026Discover causes of sneezing and runny nose including allergic nose runny symptoms, septal deviation, and no...
BlogCommon ColdMay 18, 2026Discover how the rhinovirus virus causes common cold symptoms and what to expect during recovery. We offer ...
BlogCommon ColdMay 18, 2026Rhinovirus in adults causes 2-3 colds yearly with symptoms like runny nose and cough. We explain causes, sp...
BlogCommon ColdMay 18, 2026We explain the cold contagious period, highlighting when you stop being contagious and can resume daily lif...
Get instant answers from our medical team. No forms, no waiting — just tap below to start chatting now.
Start Chat on WhatsApp or call us at +90 530 174 28 17