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Breath By Breath: The Lungs

Close to 350,000 Americans die every year of lung disease, the country's third largest cause of death behind heart disease and cancer (excluding lung cancer).

While these death rates cause concern, lung disease affects many more people as a chronic condition every day. More than 30 million Americans suffer with chronic lung disease such as emphysema, asthma and chronic bronchitis today, costing $61.2 billion annually in direct and indirect economic costs.

The good news is that many lung diseases can be prevented by smoking cessation, avoiding environments with irritants to the lungs, and other lifestyle choices. In this section, you'll learn about how the lungs work and how to prevent lung disease.

Information for this section from: Facts in Brief About Lung Disease, American Lung Association, 6/91; Lung Disease Data 1995, American Lung Association, 1995; Mayo Clinic Family Health Book, William Morrow and Company, Inc., New York, 1990.


Other lung disease facts

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  • Lung disease and breathing problems are the number one cause of death for babies under one year old, accounting for about 33% of infant deaths.
  • The lung is a major target of infection in people with AIDS.
  • Lung disease is the number one disabler of American workers.
  • Lung disease strikes people of all ages and races, but the overall lung disease death rate for black Americans is 20.4 % higher than for whites.
  • Acute respiratory diseases account for 61% of school absenteeism attributed to acute conditions.
  • Cigarette smoking is the major cause of emphysema and chronic bronchitis.
  • Americans spend almost 420 million days in bed each year due to acute respiratory conditions such as influenza (flu) and the common cold.

How the lungs work

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Lungs provide oxygen to your blood and remove carbon dioxide from it. They are located within your chest and are protected on the sides, back and front by your ribs and the cartilage and muscle between them. Your diaphragm separates your chest cavity from your abdomen. Your heart is between your lungs, located over one corner of the left lung.

Soft and spongy, healthy lungs are a mottled pinkish gray color. Your right lung is divided into three sections (lobes), while your left lung has two. When you inhale, air enters through your mouth and nose, travels through the back of your throat (pharynx), through your voice box (larynx), and down your windpipe (trachea). Like an upside-down tree, the trachea branches into two main tubes, then each tube branches into smaller passageways (bronchi) which continue dividing and eventually form much smaller tubes (bronchioles). The smallest bronchioles end in tiny air sacs called alveoli, where the oxygen in the air you just inhaled transfers to your blood located in capillaries lining the alveoli. At the same time, the carbon dioxide in the capillaries is released. This is called gas exchange.

Your heart is located next to your lungs for a very good reason --- teamwork! After oxygen is released into your blood, the blood is pumped through pulmonary vessels and veins back to the heart. Oxygen-rich blood is then pumped out of the heart to deliver oxygen to the cells in your body and to remove carbon dioxide.

Your heart then pumps the blood back to your heart's right ventricle (bottom right amber) through the pulmonary artery to your lungs. Similar to the airways, the pulmonary arteries form smaller and smaller vessels down to the capillaries, which are so tiny that the blood cells pass through single file.


Diagnosing lung disease

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If you have early warning signs of lung disease such as shortness of breath or fatigue, talk to your doctor about diagnosing the problem with a pulmonary function test. These tests can assess the severity of functional impairment, determine your suitability for certain jobs or activities, and follow the progress of the disease and its response to treatment and cardiopulmonary rehabilitation.

Commonly performed pulmonary function tests include measurements of lung volumes, forced expiratory flow rates (how fast you can blow the air out of your lungs), slow vital capacity (how much air you can move with your lungs), diffusing capacity (how well your lungs perform gas exchange), and maximum inspiratory and expiratory pressures (an overall measure of respiratory muscle strength). In addition, cardiopulmonary exercise testing is often performed to measure maximum oxygen consumption and anaerobic threshold.

Testing techniques include spirometry, pulmonary function, plethysmography, and cardiopulmonary exercise testing.

Spirometry

In the spirometry procedure, you will breath through a device called a spirometer that will measure and record the amount of air you exhaled and the rate of air passage for a specific time period. As you will need to take the deepest breath you can and exhale for as long as you can, the results of this test depend on your effort. The information will be displayed on a computer screen as a volume versus time curve or a flow versus volume curve. Your health care provider will interpret this curve to detect any abnormalities in the large or small airways of your lungs.

Pulmonary function testing

A pulmonary function testing system will perform spirometry as described above as well as measurements of your lung volumes and bronchial provocation (measurements of your lungs before and after you inhale an agent used to provoke your lungs). As in spirometry, the results of these tests are dependent upon your effort.

Body plethysmography

Body plethysmographs are airtight, transparent chambers in which patients sit inside and breathe on a mouthpiece. The "body box" --- as pulmonary specialists call it --- measure the pressure changes inside the box as your chest cavity moves with breathing to determine the total amount of volume inside your lungs. Another measurement is called airways resistance, which is basically measuring how much pressure it takes to push air through your airways. It detects even the smallest changes in your lungs. Because of its superior sensitivity to changes in your airways, plethysmography is considered the most accurate way to diagnose lung diseases such as asthma which react to substances or other triggers.

Cardiopulmonary exercise testing

Although all the previous mentioned tests are frequently adequate for detecting cardiorespiratory problems, these tests are performed while you are sitting quietly. Thus, they may not detect problems with your cardiorespiratory system that occur during activity. However, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (sometimes also called gas exchange testing) can detect symptoms during exercise. These systems vary in features but generally require you to take a standard stress test on a treadmill or bicycle while breathing through a mouthpiece that measures the amount of oxygen you are consuming and carbon dioxide you are exhaling. Because it measures how well your heart, lungs, blood vessels, and muscles are working together, it is a comprehensive and global test to detect early warning signs of heart or lung disease.

Beware of infection

The mouthpieces, tubing and other air spaces in pulmonary testing equipment is a perfect environment for microorganisms to grow. Be sure your health care provider uses equipment with disposable mouthpieces, pneumotachs, filters, nose clips, and breathing circuits. If he or she does not use a disposable pneumotach, be sure they are following proper cleaning procedures according to the manufacturer's instructions.


Lung diseases

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Lung cancer

Lung cancer is the most common fatal cancer in the U.S., and has increased in recent years more than any other malignancy. The number one cause of lung cancer is cigarette smoking, which is responsible for 87% of lung cancer cases. Other causes of lung cancer are second-hand smoke, radon, industrial substances such as asbestos, and other airborne toxins. If found early, treatment --- surgery, radiation, drug therapy, or a combination of these --- may be effective.

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

Two lung diseases fall under the category of COPD: bronchitis and emphysema. Both conditions are largely caused by smoking and often occur together.

Bronchitis

Bronchitis affects 13.5 million Americans and is the sixth-ranking chronic condition in the country. Bronchitis is an inflammation of the lining of the bronchial tubes that connect the windpipe to the lungs. When the lining is inflamed, excess mucus is secreted and airflow to the lungs is disrupted. You will need to cough to get rid of the mucus and unclog the tubes. A persistent cough, however, may be a symptom of chronic bronchitis and demands medical attention. Too many people dismiss this disease as a "cigarette cough" and do not seek treatment.

In fact, the leading cause of bronchitis is cigarette smoking. To avoid chronic bronchitis, you must eliminate the source of irritation and infection, such as quitting smoking. Chronic bronchitis is often accompanied by emphysema.

Emphysema

Emphysema is a severe lung disease that develops gradually over a period of time. It affects about 1.9 million Americans, most of whom have been smokers for years. Portions of the lungs become so damaged they will not expand or contract with breathing. The lungs become rigid with trapped gases in the alveoli that cannot escape. Because the lungs are not efficient in exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide, the heart has to work harder and becomes damaged. The damage is irreversible, and death due to heart disease is often the result of emphysema.

Treatment options include lung transplantation and lung reduction surgery, a new procedure during which the damaged portions of the patient's lungs are surgically removed. Efforts are underway in the medical community to decide upon a standard set of criteria for selection of candidates for lung reduction surgery, but most experts agree it should include a body plethysmography test to determine the amount of trapped gas in the lungs.

Tuberculosis (TB)

Once thought to be a disease of the past, tuberculosis is increasing at an alarming rate in the U.S. due to the AIDS epidemic, spread of TB among the homeless, and drug resistance. Tuberculosis is caused by an airborne germ called tubercle bacillus. Anyone can breathe in TB germs, which are spread by coughing or sneezing from a person carrying the germ. Symptoms of TB are coughing often, feeling tired, an unexplained loss of appetite, and weight loss. Spitting up blood is a symptom of well-developed disease. TB is treated by medication. People at higher risk for developing TB are those with weakened immune defenses, such as those with HIV infection.

Asthma

Click here to link to our asthma section.

Occupational lung diseases

People who are exposed to particles in the air such as coal dust and asbestos fibers are at risk for developing occupational lung diseases called pneumoconiosis, including the following:

  • Occupational asthma: Dusts and chemicals at the worksite may trigger an asthma attack.
  • The most effective treatment of occupational asthma is to avoid the substance triggering the attack. Episodes may also be treated by bronchodilator drugs and corticosteriods.
  • Black lung: This lung disease is a common name for coal worker's pneumoconiosis, caused by exposure to coal dust over many years. The result is impaired lung function.
  • Asbestosis: This lung disease is caused by inhaling asbestos fibers, which irritate the lungs and cause thickening of the walls of the lung's alveoli. Lung cancer may be a result of asbestosis, especially if the worker also smokes. Workers may not show signs of disease for 30 years or more after exposure to asbestos.
  • Silicosis: Breathing silica dust, such as that found in rock, granite and marble industries, cause this lung disease.
     
  • Berylliosis: A disease of the lungs caused by inhaling dust from the metal beryllium usedin nuclear reactors and missile systems.

Major acute pulmonary infections (influenza and pneumonia)

People at risk for pulmonary infections are those with weakened immune systems, such as the very young, very old, those with chronic respiratory or circulatory problems, and those with weakened immune systems from congenital deficiencies, medications and AIDS.

Influenza (flu) in the U.S. generally strikes between December and March. It is caused by a virus, and its symptoms may include fever, headache, cough, sore throat, runny nose, muscle aches, and general malaise. The American Lung Association recommends all persons over age 65 receive an influenza vaccination in advance of the expected flu season, as well as anyone else at risk. Updates on flu outbreaks are available from October through May on the Center for Disease Control's interactive voice information system at (404) 332-4555. The phone is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 am to 4:30 pm Eastern time.

Pneumonia has symptoms including coughing with a lot of sputum, fever, chills, and chest pain. Vaccinations against pneumococcal pneumonia is recommended for people over age 65, adults with chronic illness, children at risk over age two, and those with HIV infection.

Respiratory distress syndrome (RDS)

Respiratory distress syndrome is a life-threatening situation that occurs in premature babies whose lungs are not fully developed and cannot breathe without assistance. The mature lung contains a fluid called surfactant that is essential for the expansion and contraction of the alveoli in the lungs. A baby born prematurely may not have this fluid, and its lungs cannot inflate. In recent years, replacement surfactants have been developed that have significantly reduced the mortality rate due to RDS.

Adult (acute) respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)

Adult respiratory distress syndrome is extensive pulmonary inflammation, small blood vessel injury, and progressive malfunction of the lungs and other organs due to inadequate oxygenation.

Fluid fills the lungs and the alveoli collapse. Acute respiratory distress syndrome may occur in children as well. ARDS is typically caused by severe trauma or massive, uncontrolled infection, and has a mortality rate of 50 percent.

Cystic fibrosis (CF)

Cystic fibrosis is a hereditary disorder that occurs about once in every 3,500 births. CF causes the production of abnormally thick and viscous mucus that obstructs a number of the body's tracts. CF affects the pancreatic ducts, which prevents normal digestion and leads to malabsorption and malnutrition. In 90 percent of cases, the airways are also affected. Children with CF are highly susceptible to lung infections, and the chronic lung dysfunction can cause severe debilitation and may lead to pulmonary hypertension and heart disease. Treatment of CF has improved greatly over the past 25 years, including antibiotics to ward off infection and bronchodilators to help treat the airways. The specific gene that causes the disease was identified in 1989, and experimental gene therapy to cure individual patients is underway in both the U.S. and Great Britain.

Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)

SIDS is the second leading cause of infant death, causing about 5,000 fatalities every year. It is the sudden death of an apparently healthy infant whose heartbeat and breathing stop. The cause is unknown, but some experts believe it is caused by an infectious agent, a severe allergic reaction, or suffocation. The American Academy of Pediatrics and the National Institutes of Health recommend placing sleeping babies on their backs or sides and to avoid thick, soft, fluffy bedding materials that can cover the nose and mouth of an infant. Maternal smoking before and after the child's birth has also been linked to SIDS.

Obstructive sleep apnea

Obstructive sleep apnea is a breathing disorder in which the upper airway frequently collapses during sleep. This results in cycles of subconscious awakenings that, in severe cases, can occur several hundred times a night. Suffers of sleep apnea experience excessive daytime sleepiness or reduced cognitive function such as memory loss and lack of concentration. They may also experience oxygen desaturation, an increase in heart rate, and elevated blood pressure during the apnea episode. Sleep apnea has also been associated with increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality due to angina, stroke and heart attack, and accidents caused by excessive daytime sleepiness.

The National Commission on Sleep Disorders Research estimates that about 20 million people in the U.S. suffer from sleep apnea, yet less than 3% of those afflicted know the cause of their fatigue or other symptoms. There are over 1500 sleep disorders clinics in the U.S., which have "sleep labs" to diagnose this disease. Treatment is a technique called nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), which delivers air and/or oxygen through a mask while the patient sleeps.


Lung disease links

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American Association for Respiratory Care
The national association for respiratory care practitioners

American Lung Association/American Thoracic Society
Information and programs on lung health, disorders and research

American Medical Association
Information about a wide range of medical issues

Mesothelioma Lung Cancer information updates
News and information about mesothelioma and treatment options for the disease. This site also provides news about asbestos-related legislation, regulations, and other topics related to asbestos exposure.


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