You didn't give us much history on yourself. If you have some type of disease then it may be permanent. If not, then any medications you are on could be the cause of it and it's to your best interest to look up any medications (even Birth Control or Hormone Replacement) on Google. Some people have a gene pool that can make them this way. There is help! You need to go for a complete physical and be sure your doctor gives you the thyroid test T3/%4. There are medications for calming your system down, but before taking ANY medications for this ask your doctor about side effects or addictiveness. If you aren't happy with his answers your pharmacist will be glad to help you. If the above answer didn't help, then please post in the discussion area of this question and give us a little more history about yourself. Thanks
Chronic cough, severe wheezing, chronic bronchitis, shortness of breath, chronic respiratory infections and severe pain when breathing can all be symptoms. Emphysema can also be a symptom.
chronic moderate pain
Chronic refers to a condition or illness that persists over a long period of time, typically more than three months. Severe, on the other hand, indicates the intensity or seriousness of a condition, often implying a high level of impact or danger. A condition can be both chronic and severe if it is long-lasting and significantly harmful.
yes but not curable
*Malignant* - severe , critical and chronic.
Documented hypoxemia; severe respiratory distress (e.g., acute asthma or pneumonia); severe trauma; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD, including chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and chronic asthma).
The meaning of Chronic Inflammation is prolonged inflammation sourced from new connecting tissues. Chronic Inflammation is usually persistent and can be severe.
Chronic diseases are those which have a prolonged duration and pain perception may not be severe e.g. arthritis.Acute disease have sudden onset and degree of pain is to a severe extent.
I think you may be referring to delirium tremens? It usually occurs in an individual who is withdrawing from a severe case of alcoholism.
In patients with chronic hypercapnia such as COPD, respirations are primarily stimulated by hypoxia.
Asbestos is associated with a number of very severe chronic health problems but chronic sinus problems is not among them.
Scoliosis is not considered chronic or acute based on severity of the curve. Chronic implies long term, so if you have scoliosis that is untreated then it is chronic. If you have a functional scoliosis that is improved through conservative treatment, or severe structural scoliosis that is improved through surgery, then it is no longer chronic. Of course, the more severe the scoliosis at the start, the less likely it is to be "fixed" and thus the more likely it is to become chronic.