Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
What is chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)?
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a condition in which some of your airways are permanently blocked. COPD makes it harder for you to breathe. It causes strain on your heart. It increases the blood pressure in your lungs (pulmonary hypertension) and makes your heart get bigger (cor pulmonale).
How does it occur?
There are 2 main types of COPD: chronic bronchitis (inflamed airways) and emphysema (damage to the lung tissue). Chronic bronchitis and emphysema result from irritation of your airways over a long time, usually from smoking and sometimes from air pollution. Other causes are on-the-job exposure to irritants such as dust or chemicals, or frequent lung infections.
Chronic bronchitis and emphysema can occur separately but often they develop together. In chronic bronchitis, the insides of the airways thicken and swell. This makes the passageway for air smaller. The damaged airways make more mucus, which can block the airways and make it hard to breathe. In emphysema, the tiny air sacs (alveoli) in the lungs may become badly damaged or destroyed and lose their ability to stretch (get bigger and smaller). This makes it harder for you to breathe out carbon dioxide after breathing in air. As the carbon dioxide collects in your lungs, there is less room for oxygen to be breathed in.
COPD is not contagious. You cannot give it to someone or get it from someone else.
What are the symptoms?
Symptoms of COPD include:
In the early stages of the disease you may not have any symptoms.
How is it diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will ask you about:
Your healthcare provider will examine you. You may have the following tests:
How is it treated?
The damage to your lungs cannot be reversed, so treatment aims to:
For smokers the most important part of treatment is to quit smoking. Talk to your healthcare provider about ways to stop smoking. You might find it helpful to join a quit-smoking program or to use nicotine patches or gum.
Your healthcare provider may prescribe:
Ask your healthcare provider if you can help your symptoms with:
Also ask your healthcare provider how much fluid you should drink every day.
A pulmonary rehab program can help you learn how to live and feel better with COPD. The program may offer supervised exercise and information about a healthy diet. It can help you learn about how your lungs work and how to care for your COPD. Ask your provider if there is such a program in your area.
In rare cases of severe COPD, surgery may be an option. Surgery can remove the most diseased part of the lungs, or a lung transplant might be considered, depending on your overall health.
How long will the effects last?
COPD cannot be cured. Once you have COPD, it does not get better, but taking good care of yourself is the best way to keep it from getting worse. The best way to take care of yourself is to avoid things that may have caused the COPD, such as tobacco smoke or exposure to dust, fumes, or chemicals at the workplace. This will give you the greatest chance of stopping the disease from getting worse.
How can I take care of myself?
Follow these guidelines to take care of yourself:
An exacerbation is a worsening of the usual symptoms of COPD. You, or sometimes a family member, are usually the first to know when your lung disease is getting worse. Watch for:
Any one of these symptoms might be a warning sign. An exacerbation is when any 2 of these things are happening. If you can catch these changes really early, you may be able to prevent a trip to the hospital. Ask your healthcare provider for instructions on what to do when you have these symptoms.
Call your healthcare provider if you have:
When should I get emergency help?
It is important to know the difference between earlier signs and symptoms of sickness and the signs of an emergency. You are in an emergency situation if:
Call 911 to get emergency help right away. Do not turn up your oxygen unless your healthcare provider tells you to do this.
How can I help prevent COPD?
85% of COPD cases are caused by tobacco smoke. This includes the smokers themselves and people who are exposed to secondhand smoke. In most cases you can prevent COPD by never smoking and not being around others who are smoking.
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