Bronchial pneumonia can be a very painful thing to be afflicted with. Bronchial pneumonia usually starts out as bronchitis which is an infection of the lungs. If left untreated the infection can turn into bronchial pneumonia which means that there is also fluid in the lungs making it hard to breathe. To be sure that one has bronchial pneumonia it's best to visit a family doctor.
It depends on how hurt you are. Bronchial pneumonia or pulmonary pneumonia can hurt you a lot. But there are other things like bronchitis, bronchial asthma, emphysema, lung cancer and tuberculosis. You have to consult your doctor.
No.
Bronchial pneumonia resulting from AIDS.
Yes pneumonia can relapse. Here is what happened to me. I got a cold / flu. Was sick for maybe half a week. During this sickness i did not have a cough. I recovered from the original illness and then i slowly developed a cough. After two weeks i was coughing up blood and terrible tasting and smelling mucus. I go to the doc, get x ray and prescribed amoxicillan. Within days of taking amoxicillan i start to recover. I get to 100% about 10 days after my amoxicillan prescription ended i start getting a fever again. Promptly go back to the doctor and yes my pneumonia was coming back. Doc said amoxicillan was not strong enough and now i am on Biaxin / Clarithmocyian.
PNA=pneumonia
Annie Smith Peck died of bronchial pneumonia
Emanuel Shinwell died in 8 May 1986 of bronchial pneumonia.
fluid gathers in the lungs and in the worst cases, death!
He was diagnosed with HIV and later died of the AIDS virusActually nobody dies of AIDS they die of complications like pneumonia or bronchial pneumonia. Freddie Mercury actually died of bronchial pneumonia. If you look up motivational posters about him this is one that comes up:(sorry the pic doesn't come up)Freddy Mercury (they can't even spell his name right!)He didn't die of AIDS, pure epic power simply devoured his body!
Jack Pitt died in May 2003, in England, UK of bronchial pneumonia.
a temporary infiltration of eosinophils into the lungs. The patient will feel tired, have a cough, spasms of the bronchial airway, and difficulty breathing. Loffler's pneumonia will clear spontaneously