Question:

As you may know, I am an asthmatic. You may also know that I suffered from a stroke 13 months ago. Because of that one of the medication I am on is Warfrin, a blood thinner. Recently I had a bad cough. I noticed that when the phlegm is expelled, there is a few dots of blood. It’s getting better now. Will using the hemoptysis frequencies help?

Answer:

Blood in phlegm indicates bacterial infection, usually always from the lungs Bloody sputum (coughing up blood or bloody mucus or hemoptysis) can come from common forms of infection in the lungs and airways, such as acute bronchitis or pneumonia.

Bloody sputum can be a result of lung cancer. Whenever bloody sputum is present and cannot be attributed to a curable condition, a complete lung evaluation is warranted. Bloody sputum is also referred to as hemoptysis.

Causes of bloody sputum include lung infection with pneumonia, bronchitis, tuberculosis, parasites (hookworm), cystic fibrosis, nosebleed (epistaxis), pulmonary edema, pulmonary embolism, chest trauma, mitral stenosis, lung cancer, and Good pasture syndrome.

As you see there are dozens of diseases and conditions which cause hemoptysis. Hemoptysisis a general description as it incorporates dozens of “exact” diseases under the one general description. For this reason it is preferable to run the exact frequency set for the “cause” of the condition or the disease underlying hemoptysis.

Example if you know the problem is bronchitis or tuberculosis, then run those precise frequency sets. If the problem is unknown, then run the hemoptysis (general) set. However it is strongly suggested to complete a lung evaluation to ascertain if there is a specific virus, or disease causing hemoptysis

Hemoptysis: 0.17, 0.18, 0.87, 2.75, 22.01, 41.58, 187.52, 265.29, 692.50, 742.06

Thanks

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