Hi everyone,
I've looked this up a few times online and cannot seem to find an informed answer.
My DD just got over a month-long virus (cough, congestion, fever) and could only swallow her phlegm. She's 2 and doesn't know how to spit it out to get rid of it.
So when you swallow it, do your stomach juices zap the virus in the phlegm, or does it just compound the problem by spreading the virus around as it moves through your intestines?
FWIW When my grandmother had a stroke and was swallowing a lot of phlegm, her nurse had me suction out the phlegm as much as I was able. But when I asked her what would happen if I couldn't suction it out, she shrugged and said "it'll go down her GI tract" like no big deal. Granny didn't have a virus, just a lot of phlegm, but maybe a concurrent infection, I can't remember as it was years ago.
Anyway that's my only recollection about this delectable subject.
I've looked this up a few times online and cannot seem to find an informed answer.
My DD just got over a month-long virus (cough, congestion, fever) and could only swallow her phlegm. She's 2 and doesn't know how to spit it out to get rid of it.
So when you swallow it, do your stomach juices zap the virus in the phlegm, or does it just compound the problem by spreading the virus around as it moves through your intestines?
FWIW When my grandmother had a stroke and was swallowing a lot of phlegm, her nurse had me suction out the phlegm as much as I was able. But when I asked her what would happen if I couldn't suction it out, she shrugged and said "it'll go down her GI tract" like no big deal. Granny didn't have a virus, just a lot of phlegm, but maybe a concurrent infection, I can't remember as it was years ago.
Anyway that's my only recollection about this delectable subject.
