Goldenhawk
Well-Known Member
Yes, actually. The human body is rather bad at permanently dealing with coronavirus colds. These articles were written long before COVID-19 showed up.The common cold, you ever have a cold more than a single time?
Common cold viruses reveal one of their strengths
Why don't we ever develop immunity against the common cold? The incredible variability of coronaviruses is better understood with this study about the ways in which coronaviruses adapt and evolve, becoming ever more effective at infecting hosts without being defeated by the immune system. The...
www.sciencedaily.com
Why we don't become immune to colds
A team of researchers at the MedUni Vienna has discovered why we never become immune to colds, and why we are able to keep catching them: the MedUni Vienna study, published in The FASEB Journal in the USA by Katarzyna Niespodziana from the Institute of Pathophysiology and Allergy Research, shows...
medicalxpress.com
Why Haven't We Cured the Common Cold Yet?
Researchers think they’re close to a cure for the common cold, but they first need to solve a complex problem that’s perplexed scientists for decades
www.scientificamerican.com
Also, we know medically that the human immune system loses its acquired resistance to specific coronavirus strains over a year or two, so even when the body does form antibodies, they don't last permanently unlike measles or certain other diseases we usually treat with one-time vaccines.