Is it still possible to get COPD or emphysema years after I quit smoking?
It is certainly possible to get COPD or emphysema years after you quit smoking, as smoking can cause chronic inflammation that builds up over time. Pulmonologist Brian Gelbman, MD, explains how COPD develops and the symptoms.
Transcript
[MUSIC PLAYING] The true problem is that smoking causes years of chronic inflammation that often builds up silently over time.
The majority of patients with COPD and emphysema actually present many years after they quit smoking. One common misconception patients have
is that they can only get COPD or emphysema while they are smoking. The true problem is that smoking causes
years of chronic inflammation that often builds up silently over time. Unfortunately, a lot of this inflammation
continues to persist after patients stop smoking. And it's only after this airway limitation crosses a critical threshold that patients
start to feel symptoms. At that point, they are usually found to have COPD or emphysema. The two dominant symptoms from COPD
are either chronic bronchitis or shortness of breath. Chronic bronchitis we define as a chronic cough
present on almost a daily basis for three months in two consecutive years. Patients also report that they frequently
get episodes of bronchitis or they have a cough productive of sputum that happens at least two to three times a year.
This can be a manifestation of COPD. The other main symptom is shortness of breath. Patients will first start to note
that they have a limitation in their exercise tolerance. What that means is they don't feel short of breath at rest, but once they start walking around,
they notice that they get more winded than people of a similar age.
copd
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