Children who are cured of a cold but have enlarged inferior turbinates can be improved by nasal rinsing, oral medications and nasal sprays. When children have an enlarged inferior turbinate after a cold is cured, nasal rinsing with saline can be used to clean out the nasal secretions and reduce the secretions from continuing to irritate the turbinate, which can improve the symptoms of the enlarged turbinate. If the enlarged inferior turbinate is due to an allergic reaction caused by a cold, oral antihistamines or leukotriene receptor antagonists, such as cetirizine and montelukast sodium, can be taken to relieve the symptoms of enlarged inferior turbinate. You can also use glucocorticoid nasal sprays, such as mometasone furoate nasal spray, to reduce the symptoms of nasal mucosal allergy, or use nasal mucosal vasoconstrictors, such as seroquel nasal spray, which can make the inferior turbinate mucosa capillary constriction and relieve the symptoms of inferior turbinate enlargement. When a child has a bad case of inferior turbinate enlargement after a cold is over, he should bring his child to the ENT department of the hospital in time to avoid delaying the treatment.