Biology, asked by tripurari1275, 9 months ago

now fìnd out why you cough and sneeze ?​

Answers

Answered by soham5054
1

Explanation:

when you cause a cold germs spread to your nose and other air passages our body fight of the germs produces slimy mucous to get rid of them coughing and sneezing blow out germs with mucous thus we cough and sneeze

Answered by keshavvyas1911
1

Answer:

A sneeze can be a wet, slimy mess. It can be a tiny toot. It can happen when we’re allergic, sick, staring at a bright light — or, compulsively, when we’re anxious.

Why do we sneeze? Simply put, a sneeze is the best way for the body to clear its passages so you can keep breathing clean air.

But what causes sneezing? When irritants such as mucus from a cold or the flu, germs, dust, pollen, animal dander, or pollutants — just to name just a few — infiltrate the nose lining, you take a massive inhalation.

Then the chest muscles tighten and pressure builds. The tongue pushes against the roof of the mouth, forcing breath to come out fast through the nose, and — achoo!

A cough is supposed to protect you. It gets out stuff that doesn't belong in your lungs and windpipe, like inhaled dirt or food. Here are the common triggers.

Viruses. Colds and the flu are the most common causes. While annoying, coughs that are “productive” get germy mucus out of your lungs when you're sick. Most will go away in a few days. After a cold, though, some "dry" coughs last weeks or months. That could be because coughing irritates your lungs, which leads to more coughing, which irritates your lungs, and so on ..

Explanation:

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