Autumn cold fighting antibiotics.

It was a poetic season, but it was also a cold season. When you get caught with this little demon, do you want to eat some antibiotics and get rid of it? Wait a minute, this antibiotics is not just an all-power potion.

Let’s get this straight. Most of the flu is caused by viruses, like nose viruses, coronary viruses, etc. They’re like a bunch of naughty little thieves sneaking into our bodies and stuffing our noses, our slugs, our coughs. And the antibiotics, it’s a “grand hero” for bacteria. You can imagine bacteria as a bunch of beasts with teeth and claws, and antibiotics have the ability to inhibit their growth or to destroy them directly. But the problem is, if it’s a virus-induced cold and you eat antibiotics, it’s like killing a chicken with a dragon knife. Antibiotics face the virus, and it’s not working, it’s staring.

If you use antibiotics when you don’t need them, it’s a big problem. It is better than being in a peaceful town, where a group of super-soldiers can begin to destroy without their enemies. In our body, antibiotics may have hurt some of the bacteria that are good to the body. They’re like little guards in our bodies that normally help us digest food and resist invasion. Once a good fungus is decimated by antibiotics, bad bacteria, which were otherwise suppressed by a good fungus, can take advantage of the tide and cause problems such as diarrhoea, fungi infections, etc. This is so-called antibiotics-related diseases such as diarrhoea and goose scabies. Moreover, bacteria are smart enough to “upgrade and evolve” in the fight against antibiotics, creating resistance. Next time you’re really infected with bacteria, it’s probably not working with this antibiotics. It’s as terrible as the weapons in your hand don’t work for the enemy.

Is that a cold and no antibiotics? Not really. If your symptoms continue to increase as a result of the flu, there are cases of high fever, coughing, suspense, etc., which may mean bacteria taking advantage of the fire and subsequent bacterial infections. It’s time for antibiotics to shine. This, however, requires a detailed examination and diagnosis by the doctor, such as looking at your blood patterns, hearing about the lung, determining the bacterial infection and specifying which bacterial infection is the appropriate antibiotics. Just as a war requires first to know who the enemy is and how many troops it is to send the most suitable troops to fight.

So we can’t be blindly dependent on antibiotics in the fall cold war. The first thing we have to do to deal with the cold is to rest and give the body enough energy to fight the virus. Drinking more water, as a source of water for the battlefields of the body, makes it work better. Eating more vegetables and fruits, refilling vitamins and enhancing immunity is providing adequate food and clothing and ammunition to the body ‘ s defence forces. If the cold is serious, do not eat antibiotics on your own and go to the doctor’s “commander” to develop the most rational combat plan.

In short, antibiotics are a powerful weapon against bacterial infection, but in no way conventional “ammunition” for cold. In this fall season, we need to properly recognize antibiotics and use them rationally in order to achieve the ultimate victory in the fight against the cold, while also protecting our precious “field of war” and allowing those who are good “pants” to continue to live in peace and protect our health.