Quizzes & Puzzles77 mins ago
Chest congestion
6 Answers
I'm in the middle of a nasty cold with a lot of chest congestion - but what causes the crackling when I breathe? Quite alarming at times!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by queries. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.queries - you have my sympathy. I sound like a steam train just now, even going to the bathroom is exhausting me - granted I am never very energetic but I feel totally washed out.
I live on my own with two ungrateful, spiteful, spoiled moggies who are helping me to recover by wakening me at regular intervals so I can feed them and I still have to catch one of them to give him his asthma inhaler.
I am off back to bed. I hope you start feeling better soon.
I live on my own with two ungrateful, spiteful, spoiled moggies who are helping me to recover by wakening me at regular intervals so I can feed them and I still have to catch one of them to give him his asthma inhaler.
I am off back to bed. I hope you start feeling better soon.
masma....yes.
"Crackles or musical sounds or wheezing is due to air trying to squeeze through airways that are either narrowed or filled with fluid or mucus or pus (gunge)
If it is an sound on breathing in it is usually the upper part of the respiratory tree, trachea or main bronchi that is involved, but if it is a sound on breathing out, it is usually further down in the respiratory tree e.g the bronchioles.
However, in more severe or long standing cases it can be both, inspiratory and expiratory.
"Crackles or musical sounds or wheezing is due to air trying to squeeze through airways that are either narrowed or filled with fluid or mucus or pus (gunge)
If it is an sound on breathing in it is usually the upper part of the respiratory tree, trachea or main bronchi that is involved, but if it is a sound on breathing out, it is usually further down in the respiratory tree e.g the bronchioles.
However, in more severe or long standing cases it can be both, inspiratory and expiratory.