Chronic cough, severe wheezing, chronic bronchitis, shortness of breath, chronic respiratory infections and severe pain when breathing can all be symptoms. Emphysema can also be a symptom.
No. A "head cold" is what some people call the "common cold" when it is presenting with mostly sinus and upper respiratory symptoms instead of with cough and more lung symptoms. Emphysema is a chronic obstructive lung disease also called COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) that is caused by smoke inhalation, cigarette smoking, pollution, and other damage to the lung tissue.
Documented hypoxemia; severe respiratory distress (e.g., acute asthma or pneumonia); severe trauma; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD, including chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and chronic asthma).
A seretide inhaler is used to treat asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Some active ingredients in this medication are fluticasone and salmeterol.
Rheumatoid lung disease often presents with a variety of pulmonary manifestations, including interstitial lung disease, pleural effusions, and nodules. Patients may experience symptoms such as chronic cough, dyspnea, and chest discomfort. High-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scans typically reveal patterns like ground-glass opacities, reticular patterns, and pulmonary nodules. In some cases, it can lead to complications such as pulmonary fibrosis, which can significantly affect lung function.
active infection pulmonary hypertension chronic lung disease with loss of more than 40% of lung function
No, asthma is a chronic condition that does not go away. The symptoms are acute and will not always be present in some people.
Some symptoms of pulmonary fibrosis are cough, reduced physical endurance and difficulty when breathing. Lung transplantation is the only option of treatment for pulmonary fibrosis.
Aids is somewhat both because when it is acute it is when you have the symptoms of aids that you can treat and it can get taken care of by antibiotics. But it is mainly chronic i believe since it can never really be treated only antibiotics can take away some of your symptoms. That is really just a guess of mine. But I believe it is right.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or COPD can be extremely serious if left undiagnosed or if not properly treated. If you have some of the symptoms of COPD you should certainly consult your doctor.
Chronic Obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is Asthma, Chronic Bronchititis, and Emphysema, all of thise diseases cause obstruction of the airways, Asthma is a disease of inflamation (which causes swelling) and constriction, which narrows the airways, That's why two medications are needed, one an anti-inflamatory, and a broncho-dilator. Emphysema is a disease in which the small airways become damaged and distroyed, becoming like tissue paper, colapsing and obstructing the airway. Chronic Bronchititis is a disease which large amounts of thick secretions are produced which obstruct the airways. Many times a patient with one of these diseases also has some of the others. This is true less often with Asthma, especially if the patient has never been a smoker.
Some diseases that start with C are: cholera, cancer, colitis, cholisystitis, crohns, chicken pox
There are a lot of treatments for pediatric asthma such as control asthma by reducing impairment through prevention of chronic and troublesome symptoms, reducing the need for a short-acting beta2-agonist for quick relief of symptoms, maintain near-normal pulmonary function.