Yes, I have experienced this symptom a few times in the past with various setups all of which had these characteristics in common: a highly restricted DTL vaping style using high nicotine strength with slow inhalation. Other common symptoms were: a general feeling of discomfort, feeling seasick. (I have no idea why, but this is how I have experienced it.)
With high VG juices (typically something like 70%-85% VG) at much lower nicotine strengths (2.5mg-3mg) this never happened to me. Not unless I actually forced it to go wrong, i.e. by purposely making some typical mistakes and that I don't recommend making them. One example of that is letting invisible, microscopically small particles of dust enter my RDA. Although this can never be 100% avoided of course, there exists a tipping point, a certain threshold above which is too much and then it instantly clogs up my throat and respiratory tract when I vape. I keep my vape-ready setups in a dust-free environment where the air is clean. No vaping in areas where the air is polluted─indoor or outdoor doesn't matter as long as the air is pure. Vacuum cleaners emit some dust because the filters in them can't collect everything from the air going through them, so I move my vape-ready setups to a different room before I do anything that can throw dust up in the air (like opening two windows or one door and one window causing the kind of fast draught that can spread around some of the dust from a surface). Purging my RDA also helps, though, at least to some degree, when necessary. But purging your atomizer isn't always a good idea. It depends what type you have.
Aside from the possibility of being sensitive to some ingredients found in some juices, another thing that tends to cause trouble is when you vape in such a particular way that the coils are getting overheated. Verify that enough air is getting in contact with the entire surface of the heated part of the coil(s), and verify that this air smashes right into that/those part(s) forcefully enough to keep the temperature in check. How much is enough is dependent of how you vape, but this changes nothing of the fact that localized heat buildups can still occur if something is out of balance and/or is misaligned in this regard.
That being said, the use of Temperature Control does not guarantee that the coil(s) will heat up evenly. It monitors the total resistance of the coil(s), so it can't detect hot spots resulting from whatever it is that might be disrupting the evenness. The same also applies to low or medium powered vaping, as the slower inhalation (compared to high wattage vaping) associated with these vaping styles does not in any way guarantee a balanced distribution of heat, and, the longer you press and hold the fire button, the longer the localized heat buildups keep building up. As a result, the local variations in temperature just keep on worsening until finally, the button is released again. I'm only saying this because there will always be at least someone out there who, when it comes to the fact that juice can be overheated, will stop at nothing to blame that on the high wattage vaping style for the millionth time.
Personally, I, find that vaping high VG juices at high wattages on handbuilt, complex, intricate coils such as aliens made from relatively thin (e.g., 28g for the core wires, 36g for the outer wrap wire) Nichrome 80 has made all the difference in the world for how the vape feels to me, and for how my body reacts to the vapor. Slow inhalation makes me gasp for air. Even, when I'm not vaping. Sorry, but this is the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.