New York Post

This cold’s a royal pain

- By JANE RIDLEY

T 90, stoic Queen Elizabeth II has rarely taken a sick day in the 64 years and 11 months she has ruled Great Britain, but a particular­ly brutal cold this past holiday season has had her laid up for more than two weeks.

She was finally seen in public on Sunday — the first time since before Christmas — when she attended a church service near her country estate. Her husband, Prince Philip, 95, was also struck down with the virus, characteri­zed by a hacking cough. According to experts, the bug believed to be causing the illness is a socalled adenovirus, rarer than the more gardenvari­ety rhinovirus. The complex adenovirus, which has 30 genes compared to the nine found in a rhinovirus, often brings symptoms akin to those of bronchitis, which can last for weeks.

It seems that, like the queen, New Yorkers are not immune to the infection. Dr. Sonali Bose, a pulmonolog­ist at the Mount Sinai National Jewish Respirator­y Institute, regularly treats such serious upperrespi­ratory conditions.

“It’s important to remember the characteri­stics of the host [that] make them especially vulnerable, such as being younger, older or having a disease like asthma,” she says.

A prolonged cough is a common complaint for sufferers, and it can last up to two months after the vi- rus has left the body because of the damage caused to the respirator­y tract.

“The virus might be gone, but the mucus that has accumulate­d stays and triggers the cough,” Bose says.

In winter, she recommends a combinatio­n of rest and indoor activity to get the secretions mobilized.

“Good nutrition is also key,” she adds. “There’s a lot to be said for the old prescripti­on of chicken soup and staying out of the cold.”

 ??  ?? A hacking cough recently sidelined Queen Elizabeth II.
A hacking cough recently sidelined Queen Elizabeth II.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States