For several years summer has brought on coughing spasms to the point of loosing bladder control and having rectal prolapse, I thought it was allergies and asthma. This year I went to the ER my Ox levels were 75 I felt like I hade a plastic bag on my head, Its COPD. The Oxygen and medications I need to take are so expancive I'm not sure I can afford to survive. What do you Do? I'm robbing my family of there necessity's of life the guilt is killing me.
Hi
If you have not found any answer check for Bode Index calculator on Internet. it is clear and give an evaluation based on statistics based on simple questions.
Good luck.
Hi
i guess since you posted your question you found some answer but if you have not and is tired of evasive answer google Bode Index, COPD Gold Stage or the Appache III on internet the latest one being used by insurance company risk assessors. It is clear and... precise about potential death rate and there is even calculators. It give a general statistic idea. Good luck.
F.
Hi there...im 47 yrs old & i was just diagnosed with early stages of copd. I had gotten sick in November & it lasted on & off for two months but with a cat scan that i received it showed pneumonia. I was on 3 bouts of antibiotics & i finally felt better. I was also wheezing at night & could not fall asleep do to it. I have been smokimg a long time & like u i need to STOP! Im sure that your cat scan will come out negative & please dont worry. The bottom line is not to be down but to be positive. We have to make small changes but they will be of big impact! Hang in there.
Hi there, I just have been told by my Doc that I have early COPD and I am only 36. He put me on Advair and it has seemed to help my wheezing. Maybe see if you can get your hands on some of that.
The only thing that will slow the progression of the disease is quitting smoking. Congrats on making your decision to do it. The only advice that I can and will give is based on my own experience. I had quit several times. Staying quit is the hard part. When I was diagnosed with emphysema, I quit cold turkey. I was disqusted and did not want to even look at one. Then after a couple of weeks I went on paxil for anxiety and it has helped soooo much, with no side effects. I am at 3 months now and can go thru most days without even thinking about them. My doc told me that if I smoke, the progression will be rapid thereby cutting the life span and quality of life to possibly 5 years. I am 56 now and only have symptoms on exertion for the most part. I got pneumonia and had a chest film that picked it up and had second opinion with pulmo guy who did pfts and confirmed moderate stage. I still find it hard to believe sometimes. I have a cleaning business, and thereby are in chemicals all day, but do wear a mask. Go to whyquit.com and lurk. Is a great website for people wanting to quit.
Thank you !
I have been smoking along time and a lot! and my Job is one that I am around a lot of metal dust,oil mist and other chem. waiting for doc appointment with C T SCAN in hand. It is not easy to stay positive when I wees every time I try to sleep.
I will post what happens as it does for anyone else it may help thank you again for your caring enough to reply.
p.s I am quiting smoking not easy but I must
whatever52
I can understand your frustration....with any diagnosis, people want to understand about how long. The thing is with emphysema, it varies tremendously. I had a friend who was in end stage COPD and was told by his doctors that he would live maybe two years in that final stage. He wound up living well over a decade with a lung function of less than 30%. What helped his case was that he stopped smoking, became as active as he could, watched his diet and became very proactive in his care. He learned everything he could possibly learn about COPD so that he could be more productive when it came to doctor's visits. He believed that teamwork between patient and doctor is necessary, I happen to believe this to be true as well.
Do you happen to know what your lung function is? What have your doctors told you? (BTW, never listen to what they say, like I said, it varies greatly person to person).
I have had some patients (I am a former RN) diagnosed in their 60's with early COPD who were told by their doctors that their COPD would not end their lives, something else would, meaning that it is slowly progressive. All in all, it depends on how advanced your lung disease is, how well you take care of yourself (do you eat well, exercise, not smoke etc...) and a whole bunch of other factors.
I wish I could help more...Sunny