Death is preceded by increasing weakness, difficult breathing, and occasional attacks of violent convulsions.
There is also weakness, difficult breathing, and rapid pulse.
Rapid, irregular, or difficult breathing is known as dyspnea, and in all such cases the animal has difficulty in obtaining as much oxygen as it requires.
Later there is difficult breathing, increased watery swelling of the face, extremities and dependent portions of the body; worse in the morning.
In heart disease there is often dyspnoea, or difficult breathing, but this is not of the nature of asthma, or phthisic.
The symptoms which indicate danger are a tumid and hard abdomen, difficult breathing, offensive and profuse diarrhea, bloody urine, delirium, or insensibility.
An inflammatory affection of the larynx or trachea, accompanied by a hoarse, ringing cough and stridulous, difficult breathing; esp.
She had now total loss of appetite, very great debility, difficult breathing; much cough, a considerable degree of expectoration, and a paucity of urine.
A chearful, strong, healthy woman; but for a few years back had experienced a degree of difficult breathing when in exercise.
He is now active and well; but, whenever he takes cold, finds some return of difficult breathing, which he soon removes by a dose or two of the infusion.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "difficult breathing" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.