The News (New Glasgow)

Coughing hard enough to make you vomit? Big coughs and big solutions

- Drs. Oz & Roizen Mehmet Oz, M.D. is host of “The Dr. Oz Show,” and Mike Roizen, M.D. is Chief Wellness Officer and Chair of Wellness Institute at Cleveland Clinic. To live your healthiest, tune in to “The Dr. Oz Show” or visit www.sharecare.com.

Last spring, Australian MP Graham Perrett, was watching an episode of “Veep” while eating sushi. Laughing at a scene in which Congressma­n Jonah Ryan is caught shaving his head to fake having cancer, he inhaled a clump of rice and began to cough violently. “I kind of stumbled forward and knocked my head on the corner of the kitchen cabinet,” he told BuzzFeed. His wife found him unconsciou­s on the ground. “I must have been out for only a few seconds,” he reported, “because, when I came to, I was still laughing at Jonah.”

Funny incident (Perrett was OK), but a severe cough is usually no laughing matter. Six to 12 per cent of the U.S. population experience­s chronic coughing. It can get so violent and persistent that it triggers vomiting, cracked ribs or bleeding. Possible causes:

1. Smoking (anything) traumatize­s airways and can cause persistent, violent coughing. Go to clevelandc­linic.org for a quit plan.

2. A chronic, dry cough can sometimes be the only symptom of asthma (and can trigger vomiting). Get a diagnosis and a treatment plan before you have a breath-stopping attack.

3. Bronchitis, pneumonia or whooping cough can produce heavy coughing, gagging and vomiting. (Get vaccinatio­ns!)

4. ACE inhibitor meds for hypertensi­on and other drugs can cause severe coughing. Talk to your doc about alternativ­es.

5. Acid reflux into your food pipe and airways can cause irritation and severe coughing. Talk to your doc about diet changes. Medication or a Mediterran­ean diet and eating early can effectivel­y relieve GERD.

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