yes
Stomach breathing is not actually breathing into your stomach. It is breathing as a result of activating your diaphragm - which sits just above your stomach and pushes on your stomach when its pulling air. Diaphragm breathing is deeper breathing and it's where you pull more air into your lungs. Once the deeper parts of your lungs are filled, the air fills the upper part of your lungs in your chest...
The signs of having high blood pressure are experiencing severe headache, fatigue, confusion, vision problems, chest pain, difficulty breathing, irregular heartbeat, blood in the urine and pounding in your chest, neck or ears.
If you sometimes have difficulty breathing and get pains in the chest, head, and stomach, you should see a cardiologist and a pulmonologist to get a proper diagnosis.
Just to be on the safe side...take him to the vet it might be lodged in his throat or stomach. He having hard time breathing...
It means you should visit a doctor. We cannot diagnose your medical problems.
Breathe in deeply using your diaphragm not your chest / lungs. That's how we should be breathing anyway...
Diaphragmatic breathing, abdominal breathing, belly breathing or deep breathing is breathing that is done by contracting the diaphragm, a muscle located horizontally between the chest cavity and stomach cavity. Air enters the lungs and the belly expands during this type of breathing.
If you have a heavy chest feeling that is not tight and you are having no breathing issues, it should still be checked out. It could be something as simple as acid reflux but it could be more severe.
Hiatal hernia is a condition in which a portion of the stomach protrudes upward into the chest, through an opening in the diaphragm. The diaphragm is the sheet of muscle that separates the chest from the abdomen. It is used in breathing.
Take him to the doctor.
You may have heart problems.
In a way it can me. If you have a really hard time breathing and your lungs have pain, then yes, it can be an effect to having pheumonia