This feeling is what happens when your throat is irritated. This often happens after an episode of reflux. The type of reflux to affect your throat is Laryngo-Pharyngeal Reflux which is when your stomach acids back up into your throat. Simple LPR can be treated with lifestyle changes and antacids.
No large meals and avoid tight fitting clothes.
Limit or avoid reflux causing foods (onions, spices, chocolate, fatty/fried foods, peppermint, milk products).
You can also try chewing trident sugar-free gum made with xanthan sweetener (a natural antibiotic helps heal damaged esophagus) and
Follow high risk meals with a serving of unsweetened applesauce.
These tips will help, but if your problem gets worse, you should visit a Gastric specialist.
Hope this helps someone. Good luck.
The symptoms are cough, chest pain, fatigue, headache, body aches, sore throat, difficulties to breath.
Chest freeze, also known as "brain freeze," occurs when you consume something cold too quickly. The cold temperature triggers blood vessels in the roof of the mouth to constrict, causing a sudden headache-like sensation. This sensation is a natural response to protect the body from extreme cold, similar to shivering in cold weather.
Possibly brain tumor. "SEE A DOCTOR!"
It happened to me along time ago...but YEAH!. nonono jk.
Anxiety!
drowsiness, dizziness, poor coordination, restlessness, excitability, nervousness, and upset stomach
Sounds like a flu, stomach ache, chills, and sore muscles are about right, not sure about the chest though, could be a chest cold.
Sore throat can be caused by many things. Most commonly, it is caused by the cold, or the flu. It is a infection in the throat where there is swelling, scratchiness, and a burning sensation. Similar symptoms may include excessive coughing or difficulty to speak . Always consult a doctor to get the best treatment.
Flutters in throat and chest, dizzyness, and fatigue. Flutters in throat and chest, dizzyness, and fatigue.
Yes, the common cold viruses are some of the primary causes of sore throats. The common cold (also sometimes called a head cold or chest cold depending on which symptoms you have) mostly affects the upper respiratory system, which includes the sinuses and nasal passages, throat and mouth, trachea and bronchial tubes and sometimes the upper lobes of the lungs. See the related questions below for some methods to help a sore throat and cold.
Stomach acid
Generally, yes.