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Bronchiectasis in teachers & health care workers

MAC & Bronchiectasis | Last Active: Nov 13 11:47am | Replies (32)

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@jnmy

Thank you for your comments and research @sueinmn You are so knowledgeable and generous with this group.

I would hope more awareness would be passed on to family doctors, especially with post Covid infections causing issues for some with lung infection and inflammation.

I hope more research is done to delve into whether untreated viral or fungal infection in the lungs might cause Bronchiectasis. I know Bronchiectasis is often discovered with other lung disease, chronic infections or NTM. Some of us though don’t have NTM (at least not yet) or other chronic illness.

We might have had lingering infections that were not treated timely and / or with the necessary antibiotics.

That one to two year period of infections, recurring symptoms, lack of airway clearance creates more than just tree in bud opacities on X-rays or CT scans.

This is anecdotal, however I heard a cardiologist recently mention that Bronchiectasis is fairly common in the teaching and medical health professions. It was this person’s observation that those working in Healthcare and teaching are exposed to lots of viruses over a career. I wonder if other cardiologists make similar observations?

Based on this specialist’s comments, I think he was referring to people who have some tree in bud opacities, noted by a radiologist, but perhaps not producing symptoms.

Perhaps researchers might be interested in the topic of untreated infection that may cause symptomatic disease and study it further.

I’m already seeing some scholarly articles from medical journals that are looking at untreated infections, with some concluding that these infections can cause Bronchiectasis.

I’ve read there will be more research. Perhaps AI will help wade through the symptoms, demographics, risk factors for disease and progression, and existing data from researchers and discover more to help educate practitioners. With luck, more research can prevent others from developing this chronic condition.

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Replies to "Thank you for your comments and research @sueinmn You are so knowledgeable and generous with this..."

This doesn’t answer this question specifically, but I think it’s worth mentioning that there’s a Bronchiectasis and NTM Research Registry. Patients at 24 clinical sites ask their patients if they are are interested in being in the registry and clinical data is collected yearly and available to researchers. My physician at Penn asked me and I enrolled. Here’s info.
https://www.bronchiectasisandntminitiative.org/Research/Registry/Bronchiectasis-and-NTM-Research-Registry
There’s also a patient centered one for those who aren’t near a clinical site.