Early Diagnosis of COPD and what to do after...

Early detection of COPD is essential for those who may be at risk. Once the disease is diagnosed, treatment can be started that can slow down or help prevent further damage from occurring to the lungs. An ongoing cough with mucus production is often an early sign of COPD.

Daily coughing is not normal and could be the sign of serious lung conditions. Individuals who have a history of smoking or repeated exposure to lung irritants should ask their healthcare professional for a breathing test called spirometry to determine if the symptoms they are experiencing are due to COPD.

breathing test with healthcare professional for COPD detection

The earlier COPD is diagnosed, the better for patients’ outcomes. Once COPD is identified, there are effective medications that can help patients do more and can help lower the chances of having COPD flares or acute exacerbations of COPD.

Image diagram of early diagnosis copd

If prevented from progressing, patients with a mild stage of COPD can live a fairly normal life.

Patients with moderate to severe stages of COPD have greater risks to their health and worse outcomes than those diagnosed with milder forms of the disease. In mild cases of COPD, respiratory systems may not be recognized or may not be very troublesome.

These individuals maybe unaware they have COPD because people may mistakenly think that their cough is just a smoker’s cough. The fact is there is no such thing as a normal smoker’s cough.

A patient feeling COPD vatigue during physical activities

Others with COPD may feel tired and experience uncomfortable breathing during physical activities, as a result, they stop being as active. This feeling of fatigue and trouble with activities may be due to COPD.

If an early diagnosis is confirmed, patients will be able to receive the appropriate medical care to reduce the progression of the disease and its symptoms. Take a look at these patients.

Can you tell which ones, if any, have COPD? Many people even many healthcare professionals believe that you can tell who has COPD based on their symptoms, risk factors, physical examination, and appearance, but this is a myth.

Spirometry to diagnose COPD

The reality is that a breathing test or lung function test called spirometry is required to diagnose anyone with COPD.

There are may other conditions that can be confused with COPD. People who have trouble breathing and have a cough may have COPD but they may have other conditions like heart failure, scarring of the lungs called fibrosis, asthma or other breathing problems instead of COPD.

This is why it is essential for you to get a breathing test called spirometry to be sure that your symptoms are due to COPD and not because of another condition. Based on your symptoms, your exposures to smoke and other lung irritants, and your medical history, your medical health provider may order a breathing test called spirometry, which may also be called a lung function test or a pulmonary function test.

During spirometry, you will be asked to take a deep breath and then exhale as hard and as fast as you can into a tube that is connected to a machine called the spirometer.

This test measures how much air you can breathe out and how fast you blow air out. This test is simple, quick, painless, and accurate. Spirometry can predict COPD before symptoms are noticed or recognized.

How fast air exits the lungs within the first second is called the Forced Expiratory Volume or FEV1 and indicates how well your lungs work or function. The spirometer allows your health care provider to compare your results against healthy individuals of similar age, height, gender, and ethnicity.

In patients who already have COPD, spirometry is helpful to monitor changes in lung function especially if done a month or two after a lung attack also known as the COPD flare or an acute exacerbation of COPD.

Some people get a cold or bronchitis that lasts for several days or even weeks. These episodes may actually be lung attacks or COPD flares which are also called acute exacerbations of COPD.

These respiratory illnesses may be the first sign that someone has COPD. People with risk factors for COPD who have repeated episodes of respiratory infections that linger and/or slow to go away should get a spirometry test about one or two months after the illness is gone to confirm their COPD diagnosis.

For patients with COPD, an acute exacerbation of COPD is serious and needs to be treated quickly. Symptoms of these lung attacks include having more trouble breathing, coughing up more mucus, and/or having a change in the color of the mucus.

If you experienced any of these symptoms, call your healthcare professional immediately. Based on how severe your COPD is by spirometry, your clinician may check the oxygen level in your blood by placing an oxygen probe on your finger called pulse oximetry or drawing blood from an artery in your wrist called an arterial blood gas test.

If your oxygen levels are low when you are sitting and not doing any activities, then wearing supplemental oxygen or having a portable oxygen like SimplyGo Oxygen therapy for at least 16 to 24 hours each day will be helpful even if you are not having trouble breathing, and will help you live longer. If your oxygen levels are normal, wearing supplemental oxygen will not help you.

Undergoing a spirometry test to diagnose COPD has important benefits. If caught early in mild cases, the core and severity of the disease can be modified.

Early detection of COPD results in less disability and better quality of life.