It could be, but not necessarily. Coughing is more likely due to a cold or flu.
Teeth grinding in children has nothing to do with having enlarged adenoids and tonsils. If a child is grinding their teeth, it is simply a bad habit.
His tonsillitis and the enlarged tonsils it causes may have disappeared. His tonsils may now have shrunk to their normal smaller size.
i would like to know what causes an enlarged bladder. what are they symptoms? is feeling nauseous a symptom of it?
obstruction, sleep apnea, inability to swallow properly because of enlarged tonsils, "hot potato" voice (breathy voice) and other speech abnormalities due to enlarged tonsils, recurrent or persistent abscesses or throat infections
Yes, coughing up blood (medical term: Hemoptysis) is a symptom of Fibrosis. However it is also a symptom of many other issues. If you are asking the question because you or somebody you know is coughing blood, they should see a doctor asap to determine the exact cause.
Yes, however an enlarged spleen generally does not present with physical symptoms. In those cases where a physical symptom does occur, it is likely to be pain in the upper left abdomen.
In cases where the cause is evident, such as allergies or enlarged tonsils, a person should first remedy that problem; perhaps have the tonsils removed and treat allergies with medication.
Pharyngeal tonsils are a bunch of lymphatic tissue in the back of the throat behind the ulvua. If these happen to become enlarged in small children they can cut off their airway.
No.
Chronic coughing is a symptom. The symptom of coughing can be an acute or chronic problem, and can point to a condition (such as lung irritation) or a disease (such as COPD). It can point to a viral or bacterial cause, or simply irritation in the airways.
Coughing is not the cause of anything. It is a symptom.
Pain is the subjective symptom, since it cannot be perceived directly by someone other than the examiner.