|
... since they may do more harm than good. The most common reason for a hoarse voice is acute infection, also called laryngitis. Larynx is the Latin term for the voice box. It serves two main roles -- it generates sounds, allowing us to speak, and it ...
|
|
... provide mucilages that coat the inflamed surfaces which relieves the inflammation that is caused by bronchitis. Laryngitis - couch grass relieves laryngitis caused by accumulation of phlegm. Its mucilages make phlegm much more slippery which makes ...
|
|
... bilaterally in the corners of my upper and lower mouth that would not heal. However, the most troubling was the laryngitis, weight loss and a feeling that something was just not right for more than two months. My allert physician continued to ask if ...
|
|
... exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, allergens, and air pollution may be the root of chronic cases of laryngitis, says new research presented at the 2008 American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF) Annual ...
|
|
... bed. That's what pseudoephedrine is for. You didn't see Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton saying they had a spot of laryngitis while on the primary trail and disappearing under the duvet, even if they might have liked to. I'd guess the self-employed, ...
|
|
... he got the gig. Unfortunately for him, though, just before his first performance with the band, he came down with laryngitis. "I sounded like I'd been smoking cigarettes for a million years." "I was like, 'Is this how this dude talks?'" Duck now ...
|
|
... by Frederick Matthias Alexander, a late-19th-century Australian actor, as a way of dealing with his recurring laryngitis. After doctors told him there was no physical cause, Mr. Alexander started to watch himself in the mirror while he spoke. He ...
|
|
... Disorders A cold is not serious. But why bother? A cold will often open a child's body to serious sickness like laryngitis, bronchitis, tonsillitis, pneumonia and infections of the ears. The most likely symptoms of common cold will include fever, ...
|
|
... ronic cough is just one of the atypical symptoms of Gastro Esophageal Reflux Disease, or GERD. Asthma, sinusitis, laryngitis and chest pain are some of the others. Getting a proper diagnosis is the first step to getting proper treatment.
|