If you are still breathing and can swallow, then you will survive. There is not a lot to be done for it other than time to heal. 24 hours is not very long for this.
Yes of course you can
You can still get strep throat if your tonsils are out.
you need to go to a hospital and have a cat scan done you may have a bleed in your head
AnswerThe Trachea is located below the Larynx, which is just under the Pharynx.The trachea is located in the throat, Near the Larynx. The larynx protrudes in men, causing the Adam's Apple, I'm telling you that so you can get a feel of where the Trachea is.The Trachea is a tube that comes off of your throat. The Trachea leads to your lungs and allows air to pass in and out of the body. It can be found about halfway between your stomach and the start of your esophagus. The trachea is located in the larynx. In the neck
Still Stuck in Your Throat was created in 2005-10.
there is still air in the trachea. when you push down on the trachea, the air moves from the trachea and into the lungs, thus inflating it. the lings should appear to move up. be a truth seeker
The cartilaginous rings in a pigs trachea are incomplete. These rings are responsible for supporting the trachea of the pig when it breathes in and out. Without these rings the pig would be in danger of having their throat collapse.
My stomach
The trachea or "wind pipe" is the channel through which air passes. For a person or animal to breathe, a necessary function of life, the trachea must be open.
First: it is the "trunk" where air passes through to your bronchus and into your lungs (alveolar duct, alveolar sac, alveolus). Second: the trachea are made up of C-shaped rings of tough flexible cartilage. These rings of cartilage protect the trachea, make it flexible, and keep it from collapsing or over-expanding. Third: is the target for tracheal intubation, a medical procedure, for the critically injured. Allowing a medical provider to secure an open airway. Mainly because the trachea leads straight into the lungs. Forth: Because the trachea is mainly flexible it allows the oesophagus (which is attached to the back of the trachea) to expand when a bolus of food is swallowed. Fifth: The epidermal cells lining the trachea produce mucus which helps to capture things still in the air (fine dust and microbes). This is swept out of the air passageway by tiny ciliary cells, into the throat, where it is swallowed.
heck no it doesn't work! I still look like I got my eyes punched out!
yes, strep is a germ of the lining of the throat not just the tonsil part.