© 2008/2009: Dr. V.M.Palaniappan.
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24. Cough
. The cough is a symptom that indicates a few problems. When a person drinks very little water, and urinates very little, cough does not occur, but several other diseases do.
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If a person drinks plenty of water (e.g., 4 L daily), and urinates much less of it (e.g., 2 – 5 times or so), then the remaining urine from the bladder gets re-absorbed by the blood stream, and most of it gets driven out of the body in the form of profuse sweat.
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During this process, some of the water appears to get stagnated within the lungs, blocking the breathing holes, called alveoli. When this happens, the person coughs*.
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(*If one stands against a mirror while coughing or sneezing, he/she could see countless number of water droplets sprayed over the mirror. These are from the lungs, and not from the mouth as such.)
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Each cough clears the alveoli of their stagnated water droplets, allowing the air to pass through on either side, thus facilitating the breathing process.
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The un-urinated water tends to flow over almost instantly and flood the alveoli, causing identical blockages repeatedly this way.
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Therefore, the cough too has to occur repeatedly until the problem is solved.
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Once the excess waste water within the body gets exhausted, the cough would stop, but only to re-occur as soon as the person starts controlling his urinal pressure after taking his next glass of water.
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Thus, a person with this kind of nagging cough may also exhibit another symptom of profuse sweating, called hyperhidrosis.
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Since this kind of cough occurs only in people who consume abundant water, most of the Skeletal or Thin persons, and a few of the water-drinking, under-urinating obese tend to become victims of such a nagging cough.
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The remedy for this problem necessitates a reduction in the water uptake to an optimum level, and frequent urination (e.g., once every hour, while awake) for a week or so. However, the cough would stop even within two days of regularising the input-output regime.
.
If the cough does not stop at all, then, it could be due to some bacterial infection. Such cases are better cured with the use of appropriate antibiotics, or with some herbal medicines on consultation with a well-trained herbalist.
.
Often, throat irritation, dryness, and the like can also create cough. Such happenings form temporary measures activated by the brain as a form of self-correction method.
.
If the alveoli blockage of this kind occurs in an otherwise-healthy person, suddenly because of breathing in moisture-containing air, as it happens when it rains, or inside a bath-room after a shower, then the lungs clear it through several sneezes. The problem stops there.
.
See my book Asthma, Bronchitis, and Sneezing… for an elaborate treatment of the subject. See Hyperhidrosis in this book.
.
.
.
24. Cough
. The cough is a symptom that indicates a few problems. When a person drinks very little water, and urinates very little, cough does not occur, but several other diseases do.
.
If a person drinks plenty of water (e.g., 4 L daily), and urinates much less of it (e.g., 2 – 5 times or so), then the remaining urine from the bladder gets re-absorbed by the blood stream, and most of it gets driven out of the body in the form of profuse sweat.
.
During this process, some of the water appears to get stagnated within the lungs, blocking the breathing holes, called alveoli. When this happens, the person coughs*.
.
(*If one stands against a mirror while coughing or sneezing, he/she could see countless number of water droplets sprayed over the mirror. These are from the lungs, and not from the mouth as such.)
.
Each cough clears the alveoli of their stagnated water droplets, allowing the air to pass through on either side, thus facilitating the breathing process.
.
The un-urinated water tends to flow over almost instantly and flood the alveoli, causing identical blockages repeatedly this way.
.
Therefore, the cough too has to occur repeatedly until the problem is solved.
.
Once the excess waste water within the body gets exhausted, the cough would stop, but only to re-occur as soon as the person starts controlling his urinal pressure after taking his next glass of water.
.
Thus, a person with this kind of nagging cough may also exhibit another symptom of profuse sweating, called hyperhidrosis.
.
Since this kind of cough occurs only in people who consume abundant water, most of the Skeletal or Thin persons, and a few of the water-drinking, under-urinating obese tend to become victims of such a nagging cough.
.
The remedy for this problem necessitates a reduction in the water uptake to an optimum level, and frequent urination (e.g., once every hour, while awake) for a week or so. However, the cough would stop even within two days of regularising the input-output regime.
.
If the cough does not stop at all, then, it could be due to some bacterial infection. Such cases are better cured with the use of appropriate antibiotics, or with some herbal medicines on consultation with a well-trained herbalist.
.
Often, throat irritation, dryness, and the like can also create cough. Such happenings form temporary measures activated by the brain as a form of self-correction method.
.
If the alveoli blockage of this kind occurs in an otherwise-healthy person, suddenly because of breathing in moisture-containing air, as it happens when it rains, or inside a bath-room after a shower, then the lungs clear it through several sneezes. The problem stops there.
.
See my book Asthma, Bronchitis, and Sneezing… for an elaborate treatment of the subject. See Hyperhidrosis in this book.
.
.
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