It is used to evaluate causes of symptoms such as chest pain, shortness of breath, and palpitations
Shortness of Breath, chest pains, coughs, hard to breathe.Shortness of breath, weight loss and expanded chest.EMPHESYMA is a chronic lung disease. Fill your lungs with air by taking a big breath, then try to take more breaths with your lungs filled. That's emphesyma. It causes difficulty breathing, wheezings. Cough.
Taking a deep breath and holding it during a chest x-ray helps to prevent blurring of the image caused by movement. It also helps to expand the lungs fully, allowing for a clearer view of the structures inside the chest.
Because air gets into your chest
Our chest will expand.
plulmoary embolism
You need to see your doctor about this problem:-) It is possible that it could be a chest infection, which is why it is important to speak to your doctor
There are different health problems that has a chest pain symptoms. Shortness of breath, sweating, dizziness or nausea, pressure or tightness of breath are the symptoms of chest pain
"asthuma" is not a word in the English language!Asthma is an inflammatory disorder of the airways, which causes attacks of wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness, and coughing.
Chest pain should be treated by your doctor. If you have chest pain that causes a hard time to breath, excess squeezing of the chest or a hard time to speak you should take your dad to the emergency room right away. He may be having a heart attack.
Puerile breathing is the characteristic bronchial-like breath sound that is heard when you listen to a child's chest with a stethoscope. Normal breath sounds in adults are vesicular, and a bronchial breath sound might signify a lung pathology. But it is thought to be normal in children because they have a thin chest wall compared to adults, which magnifies the breath sound all the way from the trachea, making it louder and more bronchial.
The condition is known as pleurisy, which is an inflammation of the pleura. Pleurisy causes sharp chest pains that worsen with each breath due to the rubbing of the inflamed layers of the pleura against each other during breathing.