Natural methods of fighting common cold, especially nasty cough?

As with most things, healthy eating and sleep will do wonders.

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Drink loads of fluids. Warm water with a ting of lemon is great to clear the clogged feeling. For a nasty cough drink hot lemon and honey tea (tea without milk).

I find this soothing to the throat. Hope that helps!

Chicken soup is always helpful to the sick. Moisture helps a cough so running a kettle can help to ad moisture to the air. Eucalyptus soothes a sore throat.

For common cold and cough,Turmeric is the best medicine. If you can not take turmeric powder directly,you can mix it with honey or jaggery. Take the powder twice in a day.It acts like an antibiotic.

It should be taken first in the morning on an empty stomach, and second time before going to bed. If you have the habit of taking allopathy medicine, then keep patience,it will take few days more. Otherwise your cold will get rid of cold within two-three days.

For nasty cough, along with turmeric powder, take three peppercorn seeds and keep them in your mouth. Don't chew or swallow. But this is also very effective.

So,if you trust nature cure treatments,do try this and see the result.

Eggnog, ice skating ... (cough cough cough). Constant cough can stop you in your tracks. “Even a little cough can be debilitating,” says Mark Yoder, MD, assistant professor of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

Cold and flu season brings on hacking coughs that can leave your chest muscles aching. But colds and flu aren’t the only problems that cause coughing. Allergies, asthma, acid reflux, dry air, and smoking are common causes of coughs.

Even medications such as certain drugs for high blood pressure and allergies can cause chronic cough. Most of the time, people can manage their coughs at home by taking over-the-counter medicine and cough lozenges, removing potential allergens, or even just standing in a steamy shower, says Giselle Mosnaim, an allergist and immunologist also at Rush. An upper respiratory tract infection like a cold or flu causes postnasal drip.

Extra secretions trickle down the back of your throat, irritating it and sometimes causing a cough, Mosnaim says. Drinking fluids helps to thin out the mucus in postnasal drip, says Kenneth DeVault, MD, professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla. Drinking liquids also helps to keep mucous membranes moist.

This is particularly helpful in winter, when houses tend to be dry, another cause of cough, he says. Try a menthol cough drop, Yoder suggests. “It numbs the back of the throat, and that will tend to decrease the cough reflex.”

Drinking warm tea with honey also can soothe the throat. There is some clinical evidence to support this strategy, Yoder says. A hot shower can help a cough by loosening secretions in the nose.

Mosnaim says this steamy strategy can help ease coughs not only from colds, but also from allergies. Humidifiers may also help. In a dry home, nasal secretions (snot) can become dried out and uncomfortable, Mosnaim explains.

Putting moisture back in the air can help your cough. But be careful not to overdo it. “The downside is, if you don’t clean it, (humidifiers) become reservoirs for pumping out fungus and mold into the air, and bacteria,” says Robert Naclerio, MD, chief of otolaryngology at the University of Chicago.

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