Is the lack of air in the nose a new crown pneumonia?

Nose disinflation is not necessarily a new coronary pneumonia; symptoms of nasal disinflation are typical nasal symptoms. The cause of nasal symptoms is often due to nasal diseases or upper respiratory tract infections, such as rhinitis or allergic rhinitis, which can cause nasal hypoventilation. The presence of deviated septum or severe sinusitis or nasopharyngeal cancer can also cause nasal disinflation, as can the presence of common cold. Therefore, there is no definite link between nasal hypoventilation and neoconjunctivitis, which typically presents with fever, dry cough and weakness, not nasal hypoventilation. Of course, there are patients who can develop nasal disinflation, but the two should not be equated.