DEFEATING DISEASE: TALES OF THE LUNG

Breathing’s pretty much what it’s all about in the death-defying game. But more than 96,000 Americans each year stop doing it thanks to an increasingly rampant form of lung disease called chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD. This isn’t pneumonia or lung cancer but a group of conditions characterized by blocked air flow.

There are two principal players in this death act-chronic bronchitis and emphysema-and they often do a duet in the same victim. You may have had a bout with acute bronchitis, with all that coughing and mucus accompanying a severe cold. Imagine those symptoms as a permanent result of inflamed and scarred bronchial tubes and you know what chronic bronchitis is all about.

Emphysema weakens and breaks the inner walls of the air sacs in the lungs, impairing the flow of air into the lungs and the distribution of oxygen into the rest of the body. The damage is irreversible, and emphysema victims find themselves short of breath and unable to do much of anything that requires physical exertion.

About 14 million Americans suffer from chronic bronchitis (a 60 percent increase since 1982), and 2 million from emphysema, 61 percent of them male. The cause of this sad state of affairs is smoking, for the most part. It accounts for 82 percent of all COPD. Don’t smoke, and you’re 82 percent of the way there. Here are some other ways to keep on breathing.

Find clean air. Hawaii might start looking pretty good to you if you’re in the early stages of COPD. The best way to control chronic bronchitis is to keep your nose, throat, sinuses, and bronchial tubes away from things that can inflame or irritate them, says Dr. Steven Mostow of the University of Colorado. Those things include smog, dusty working conditions, and cigarette smoke. Air pollution also aggravates emphysema symptoms. If Hawaii’s out of the question, the American Lung Association recommends that you plan your activities in the early morning or evening when smog levels are at their lowest.

Nip infections early. Any cold or respiratory infection is going to make COPD symptoms worse. So it’s not wimpy to consult a doctor at the first sniffle of a cold. And ask your doctor about getting vaccinated against influenza and pneumococcal pneumonia, two illnesses that can severely hinder breathing, says Dr. Mostow.

Keep moving. COPD or no, general health is still a good way to fight off infections. The American Lung Association recommends regular exercise that doesn’t tire you out much for chronic bronchitis sufferers. You should also exercise with emphysema, but as part of a doctor-guided pulmonary rehabilitation program, says Dr. Mostow.

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