Bronchiectasis: New Diagnosis
New to your group. Non-smoker. Pneumonia x6 in 12 years, double pneumonia twice. Was diagnosed with chronic bronchitis and COPD for past 15 years, now pulmonologist based on x-rays and MRI has diagnosed no COPD, yes bronchiectasis. Take advair 250/50 twice a day. Past ten days I am increasingly gurgling, wheezing, some chest pain. I have recently moved to Florida which I like but am having long wait times to get into see a family care NP who can hopefully refer me to a pulmonologist. I walk 20-30 minutes a day. Any ideas how to manage this now. Am worried about getting pneumonia again. I went to one walk-in clinic at a reputable hospital. They literally did nothing except take x-rays. Didn't even talk to me. Just billed $2000+ for x-rays. Do I try another walk-in clinic. I feel very alone right now with this chronic medical problem.
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Ventolin is albuterol. It is not a steroid, and not addictive. As several have mentioned, using an albuterol, levalbuterol or similar neb regularly helps relax the bronchial passages so that other meds (like Tobramycin for pseudomonas or Breo) penetrate the lungs more effectively, and so that breathing therapy to get rid of mucus (saline, Acapela device, etc) work better. Th e nebulised solution is more effective, but if all you have is the inhaler, use that. If Ventolin, or plain albuterol makes you so shaky that you refuse to use it except in an emergency, ask your doctor for levalbuterol neb and inhaler. Brand name is Xopenex, and it was often not covered because it was expensive, but a generic form is now available. For me levalbuterol not only means less tremors, but it does not seem to raise my heart rate or blood pressure as much as albuterol.
@sueinmn -- Thank you for the information!
--Dee
@janovr -- I don't see anything in your post. Did you mean to write me about something?
--Dee
@brigb- Yes Albuterol- sorry. That's an excellent question, one for you Pharmacist or Pulmonologist.
@sueinmn- Thank you, I meant to write albuterol. Thank you for posting this. It's great info.
Hi. I was diagnosed with mild bronchiectasis in 2005 but was stable and functioning
Very well until 2014. Then I had bad bronchitis with bad asthma every quarter until it became more frequent. By 2017 I was on antibiotics almost every other month. Got hospitalized for pneumonia. Diagnosed positive for aspergillosis and treated for six months. Diagnosed for low immune system
And given immunoglobulin monthly shots. But still I was sick and getting worse.
Finally in June 2018 I was hospitalized for 17 days to be given a 14 day two strong antibiotics by ivy, and a bronchoscopy and lavage. Still they could
Not find any definite bacteria. I was scheduled to fly to singapore for a lung biopsy
When my pulmonologist had me tested for autoimmune disease. I tested positive and now on steroids and immunosuppressant drugs. Definitely my downhill went
Uphill .. slowly but surely. Your symptoms of low grade fever and extreme fatigue was what I had... together with the hacking cough and green phlegm. This kind of autoimmune is rare . It is not lupus ... really immune system attacking the lungs primarily. So from asthma, then bronchiectasis, then interstitial pneumonitis, then aspergillosis (ABPA), then low immune system, then MAC, and now autoimmune system attacking the lungs. This is how my COPD progressed from a childhood illness of asthma. As the others, I avoid seasonal and environmental allergens / triggers. Bec of autoimmune I also have to avoid fatigue, a strong trigger for a flare up. But I am able to live a relatively normal life.
I’m female 71 y/o, retired, and live in the Philippines.
@noahs -- Hi! Thank you for sharing with the group! I am very sorry to hear about your lengthy ordeal; thankfully, you are feeling and getting better! I was wondering -- By chance, is your heart rhythm slow? I am asking because a slow heart rhythm (Bradycardia) also causes a lot of fatigue, and it often goes unnoticed, particularly in women.
Stay well!
-- Dee
Hi . My heart rhythm is actually in the fast side with arrhythmia. Fatigue is really from my autoimmune . Did not feel the fatigue until late 2017 and more in mid 2018. I just finished with an autoimmune flare up last week. My rheumatologist was tapering my steroids but my immune system attacked my lungs. My pulmonologist thought it was another long drawn infection until she noted my lingering low grade fever and fatigue despite the antibiotics ... I was on three sets of antibiotics for 6 weeks. My pulmo increased my steroids . My low grade fever was gone and I started to recover. My rheumatologist further increased my steroids and added addtl tab of immunosuppressant drug. I started tapering off again today April 2. As suggested in this group about tapering prednisone, we will do it more slowly and maybe just go 1mg less after I reach the 10 mg marker that suits me. I’m now on 15 mg less 2.5mg today for the next two weeks
@noahs My ID doc checks my immune system periodically,
and I’m always have a couple things outside normal range. How exactly did they diagnose your rare autoimmune disorder?
Hi. They checked my autoimmune thru blood tests... forgot what they were ... but one was ANA. I was immediately referred to a rheumatologist who confirmed that I am autoimmune and placed me on steroids and immunosuppressant drugs. Now he is trying to find the right balance for me so I can
Get off totally or a much lower dose of steroids yet prevent an autoimmune flare up. Oh btw, in Jan 2018 they found my immune system low so they thought that was causing my frequent lung
Infections. So I was given monthly intramuscular immunoglobulin shots. My condition worsened . So that’s when I was
Hospitalized for 17 days . And diagnosed autoimmune attacking the lungs. You can google it ... I googled ad nauseaeum. Autoimmune attacking the lungs.