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- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: Chronic Bronchitis & Asthma
- Message-ID: <139@ky3b.UUCP>
- From: km@ky3b.pgh.pa.us (Ken Mitchum)
- Date: 2 Jan 93 16:06:55 GMT
- Sender: news@pgh.pa.us
- References: <1992Dec17.094320.11147@visual.spk.wa.us>
- Organization: KY3B - Vax Pittsburgh, PA
- Lines: 50
-
- In article <1992Dec17.094320.11147@visual.spk.wa.us>, pwageman@visual.spk.wa.us (Peggy Wageman) writes:
- |> Are the symptoms of chronic bronchitis and asthma the same? And if they are
- |> how are they diagnosed? Are the medication the same for both? Any information
- |> is appreciated. Thanks, Peggy Wageman
-
- This is a commonly asked question which is impossible to answer fully without going
- into great medical detail. So my answer will be relatively brief and not very detailed,
- which may upset some people.
-
- Chronic bronchitis and emphysema are two different forms of "chronic obstructive pulmonary
- disease", or COPD. These diseases are commonly associated with cigarette smoking, although
- there are other causes. To adequately describe the differences between them would require
- a discussion of lung anatomy and physiology that is way beyond what would be appropriate
- on the net. Basically, with chronic bronchitis, there is much sputum production, while
- with emphysema, actual destruction of lung predominates. The "typical" patient with
- chronic bronchitis is the "blue bloater", who is hypoxic without being short of breath,
- and is subject to CO2 retention when given supplemental oxygen. The "typical" patient
- with emphysema is more the "pink puffer" who is always short of breath, even when
- maintaining decent oxygenation. Many patients have features of both conditions, and
- we usually just refer to a patient as having "COPD."
-
- Patients with COPD often may have bronchospasm, which results in wheezing and an
- acute increase in shortness of breath. Bronchospasm is also the physiologic mechanism
- of asthma. So the brief answer to your question is yes, the symptoms of bronchospam
- are the same for chronic bronchitis and asthma. However, the disease process is quite
- different: a patient with COPD has a chronic, slowly worsening disease process,
- which can be demonstrated through pulmonary function studies even when there
- is no acute bronchospasm. This is not in general true of the patient with asthma,
- who basically has normal lungs in between attacks. Another way of saying this is
- to describe asthma as "reversable airways obstruction" and COPD as "fixed obstruction",
- which describes the response to bronchodilator medication given in a
- pulmonary function study.
-
- In the real world, patients often have features which are combinations of both
- conditions, for example, a patient with chronic bronchitis who has intermittant
- bronchospasm that responds quite well to medication. Some people use the term
- "asthmatic bronchitis", which I personally do not like at all.
-
- Some of the medications used for the two conditions are the same, although the
- emphasis is quite different. Theophylline drugs are commonly used as mild bronchodilators,
- although most pulmonary doctors will tell you they are not very potent medications,
- and often they do not result in any improvement in PFTs, even though the patient
- often feels less short of breath with these drugs. Inhaled bronchodilators are the
- real mainstay of treatment. With asthma, the emphasis is on beta-adrenergic
- stimulants, such as albuterol. With COPD, the emphasis is on anticholinergics,
- such as ipatroprium. Many COPD patients respond poorly to just about everything,
- and unfortunately, end up on just about everything. In such cases, the doctor is
- usually afraid to stop anything, less make the patient worse.
-
- -km
-