The Evening Leader

To Your Good Health

- Dr. Keith Roach, M.D.

DEAR DR. ROACH: Could you explain the difference between the delta variant and the common cold? How is one to know if an illness is the common cold with cough for weeks or the virus! — Anon.

ANSWER: The virus that causes COVID-19 — SARS-CoV-2 — is a coronaviru­s that can cause many different symptoms, some of which are similar to the cold. Some people have very mild symptoms that can seem like the cold. The strain that is circulatin­g now, called the delta variant, seems to have somewhat different symptoms from the previous variants.

Cough and loss of taste and smell are reported less frequently, while headache, sore throat, runny nose and fever are more common. Since these symptoms (except fever) are common in the cold, I would encourage people to get tested even if they have only mild symptoms. This will help slow the pandemic by reducing the number of people an infected person could be exposing.

There are many different families of viruses that can cause cold symptoms. This includes rhinovirus­es but also, confusingl­y, different types of coronaviru­ses, but only SARS-CoV-2 causes COVID-19.

DEAR DR. ROACH: I had a colonoscop­y yesterday, something I have held off since getting my first one 15 years ago at age 46. The dreaded prep wasn’t as horrible as I remembered, so I am now less resistant to the next one. Is this because I’m getting older and more tolerant, or has the prep process improved? I think it’s the latter but wanted to check with you.

Some of my friends brag that they don’t need to have them done. When I was getting the procedure done, I overheard another patient getting ready for the procedure say he was getting it done because they found blood in his stool test. My primary physician told me that colonoscop­y is the gold standard and I’m glad that my insurance supports it. — S.K.

ANSWER: Colonoscop­y is indeed what most doctors choose for themselves as a screening test for colon cancer. However, for people at average risk for colon cancer, there are alternativ­es. A fecal immunochem­ical test looks for blood and has been proven to be better than no screening. A multitarge­t stool test (such as Cologuard) looks both for blood and for the abnormal DNA associated with colon cancer. A CT colonograp­hy, formerly called “virtual colonoscop­y,” is an option, but many of my patients noted discomfort with the gas distention used in that procedure. All of these alternativ­es, however, will ultimately require a colonoscop­y if they are positive, just as the person you overheard did.

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