vvvexation: (blah)
vvvexation ([personal profile] vvvexation) wrote2005-02-20 09:39 pm

Medical question

How necessary are expectorants when one has a chest cough? I mean, do you get better faster if you cough up all the crud faster, or will it go away on its own even if you don't hasten the up-coughing process?

[identity profile] deyo.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 05:20 am (UTC)(link)
Like cough suppressants, expectorants are intended to make you feel better. If hacking up phlegm doesn't feel better than having it sit there, don't take an expectorant. :)

[identity profile] fyfer.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 05:25 am (UTC)(link)
The NP I saw at Tang told me I should have been using an expectorant and cough suppressant more regularly when I had my month-long lingering crud. He gave me codeine + guafenisin and said that without suppressing the cough I was just letting my lungs stay irritated indefinitely and they wouldn't heal til I stopped coughing. I'm not sure how sound his logic was. The logic in my sentence above is abysmal but I'm not feeling very coherent.

I'd had a nasty cough for a month though (there was certainly some sort of bronchitis going on, just not bacterial) so it might have been more necessary in my case than usual.

[identity profile] cjsmith.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 05:31 am (UTC)(link)
My understanding is: nice but only occasionally necessary, yes, usually.

I use it.

[identity profile] phinnia.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 05:38 am (UTC)(link)
I never gave the kiddo any during his last chest cold, we just used vicks and those vapor plug things.

[identity profile] cyan-blue.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 06:50 am (UTC)(link)
Hope you feel better soon!

[identity profile] caesia.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 07:04 am (UTC)(link)
I will send Sai back with some of my loot from my recent bout with pneumonia... They gave me like everything ever invented for cough suppression, I swear. I have codeine syrup and Tesselon pearls and these ubermegapseudoephedrineslashexpectorant things. The codeine syrup seriously works wonders and knocks you right out : p but the tesselon is nondrowsy. *pobrecita*

A dry cough hurts like hell after a while. It's what gives you the bouts of coughing that go on and on and on and incidentally how I strained three muscles in my belly and sides. A 'wet' cough with phlegm doesn't do that nearly as much. Trust me, wet is better. And it sounds more pitiful when you're explaining to your teachers why you missed the midterm.

[identity profile] japlady.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 08:23 am (UTC)(link)
Mom had been a head nurse, she said she once saw a paticent who had drowned on their own phlem, she was VERY adement that we had to take an expecterant and NOT a suppresent (and blow, don't sniffle). Basically the expecterent loosens it so you can cough it out of your lungs, or at least so the little hairs can do their job and move it out.

[identity profile] haggis-bagpipes.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
You get better because of the psychological effect of having some sort of treatment!

[identity profile] lintqueen.livejournal.com 2005-02-21 11:08 pm (UTC)(link)
One more opinion. Expectorant is a Good Thing early on when you've got GUNK to cough up.

However, if you continue to cough, and it's a "non-productive" cough (that dry, nasty hack hack thing) *that's* Not Helpful and is terribly self-perpetuating. Coughing makes lungs unhappy. Unhappy lungs cause you to cough. Lather, rinse, repeat. At that point you need a cough suppressant *or* if that doesn't work, they'll usually put you on something steroidal (inhaler thingy, like albuterol)...