@bennb023
I'm a 64 year old COPD sufferer. I was diagnosed about 13 years ago. At that time i quit smoking and took up exercise. I work fulltime and exercise at a high level. Up until 2016 I never had a lung infection. In Oct of 2016 I was admitted into the hospital with pneumonia. I recovered. Then in March of 2019 I was admitted a second time for pneumonia. After my release my first chest x-ray showed a small area of infection. We waited until June for the repeat x-ray. That x-ray showed a recurrence of the pneumonia, although I didn't feel sick either time. I just finished a course of oral antibiotics (after the second but not the first x-ray). I have a ct scan next week. If it still shows an infection my primary will refer me to a pulmonologist. My primary doesn't believe my COPD is severe enough to be the cause of an auto-immune disease that is causing these recent lung infections. And if I had MAC or CVID why did I have my first lung infection over 10 years after I quit smoking? However, I'm afraid he is wrong and I have MAC or CVID. How did you get diagnosed? What specialist diagnosed you?
benn, I don't know where you live, or how your primary care physician determined that your COPD isn't bad enough to see a pulmonologist. You are 64 so you will be eligible for Medicare soon..... get to a pulmonologist, get a lung function test done. Your bouts with pneumonia scare me. You have done two great things.... quit smoking and started a good exercise regiment. Have you been checked for Alpha 1... it is, and I am one, a genetic condition. You can be tested for free.... go to alpha1.org. It is a 1 in 2500 chance, but worth the effort, especially for your family if you are tested positive. I am not a medical professional in any way, but am a COPD ALPHA1 patient, will turn 70 in OCT, have a wonderful pulmonologist at Mayo, in Rochester MN, am on three different nebulizer medicines, on 2L O2 at night, and on a antibiotic. At about 25 EVERYONES pulmonary function decreases, when you quit smoking you returned to a healthy slope of decay, just at a lower level.... so it is important to know where you started. Good Luck and keep up the good work.
@waterboy thank you I will look into an alpha 1 test as well as MAC and CVID tests (although I did have a normal sputum test)
I remember when I only suffered with COPD and lived in fear of my lung cancer from my yearly chest x-ray results. Now I know those were the naive, carefree days-gone forever. There are so many more hideous smoking related conditions to ponder: CVID, MAC and Alpha 1 ,to name a few. It wouldn't be so bad if the docs came up with just 1 cure for every 3 new lung diseases. Unfortunately, medicine is good at identifying and cataloging new diseases but so much at treating them. I wonder if by the time I die from lung disease, it will be a newly discovered disease, and will bear my name.
I wanted to share the following discussion and additional group as you may be able to learn from what others have said and may be able to find support.
I wanted to share the following discussion and additional group as you may be able to learn from what others have said and may be able to find support.
@bennb023
I'm a 64 year old COPD sufferer. I was diagnosed about 13 years ago. At that time i quit smoking and took up exercise. I work fulltime and exercise at a high level. Up until 2016 I never had a lung infection. In Oct of 2016 I was admitted into the hospital with pneumonia. I recovered. Then in March of 2019 I was admitted a second time for pneumonia. After my release my first chest x-ray showed a small area of infection. We waited until June for the repeat x-ray. That x-ray showed a recurrence of the pneumonia, although I didn't feel sick either time. I just finished a course of oral antibiotics (after the second but not the first x-ray). I have a ct scan next week. If it still shows an infection my primary will refer me to a pulmonologist. My primary doesn't believe my COPD is severe enough to be the cause of an auto-immune disease that is causing these recent lung infections. And if I had MAC or CVID why did I have my first lung infection over 10 years after I quit smoking? However, I'm afraid he is wrong and I have MAC or CVID. How did you get diagnosed? What specialist diagnosed you?
I wanted to share the following discussion and additional group as you may be able to learn from what others have said and may be able to find support.
Thank you for the welcome. I was diagnosed with copd in 2004, cvid in 2017,and Mac in 2015. Please don’t worry. Not offended by your humor. I think we need a big dose of humor to help deal with all of this!
I wanted to share the following discussion and additional group as you may be able to learn from what others have said and may be able to find support.
Hi @benn023 My diagnosis was pneumonia. I completed antibiotic treatments. the follow up x ray showed a small area of infiltrate which the doc said is lingering pneumonia. He prescribed antibiotics. I just finished those and I'm scheduled for the follow up ct next week. My question is what is the difference between pneumonia and CVOD and MAC
I read that cvid and mac are autoimmune diseases that may be but don't have to be related to copd. Is this true and if so does this mean that unlike copd it may be curable"
@bennb023
I'm a 64 year old COPD sufferer. I was diagnosed about 13 years ago. At that time i quit smoking and took up exercise. I work fulltime and exercise at a high level. Up until 2016 I never had a lung infection. In Oct of 2016 I was admitted into the hospital with pneumonia. I recovered. Then in March of 2019 I was admitted a second time for pneumonia. After my release my first chest x-ray showed a small area of infection. We waited until June for the repeat x-ray. That x-ray showed a recurrence of the pneumonia, although I didn't feel sick either time. I just finished a course of oral antibiotics (after the second but not the first x-ray). I have a ct scan next week. If it still shows an infection my primary will refer me to a pulmonologist. My primary doesn't believe my COPD is severe enough to be the cause of an auto-immune disease that is causing these recent lung infections. And if I had MAC or CVID why did I have my first lung infection over 10 years after I quit smoking? However, I'm afraid he is wrong and I have MAC or CVID. How did you get diagnosed? What specialist diagnosed you?
benn, I don't know where you live, or how your primary care physician determined that your COPD isn't bad enough to see a pulmonologist. You are 64 so you will be eligible for Medicare soon..... get to a pulmonologist, get a lung function test done. Your bouts with pneumonia scare me. You have done two great things.... quit smoking and started a good exercise regiment. Have you been checked for Alpha 1... it is, and I am one, a genetic condition. You can be tested for free.... go to alpha1.org. It is a 1 in 2500 chance, but worth the effort, especially for your family if you are tested positive. I am not a medical professional in any way, but am a COPD ALPHA1 patient, will turn 70 in OCT, have a wonderful pulmonologist at Mayo, in Rochester MN, am on three different nebulizer medicines, on 2L O2 at night, and on a antibiotic. At about 25 EVERYONES pulmonary function decreases, when you quit smoking you returned to a healthy slope of decay, just at a lower level.... so it is important to know where you started. Good Luck and keep up the good work.
@waterboy thank you I will look into an alpha 1 test as well as MAC and CVID tests (although I did have a normal sputum test)
I remember when I only suffered with COPD and lived in fear of my lung cancer from my yearly chest x-ray results. Now I know those were the naive, carefree days-gone forever. There are so many more hideous smoking related conditions to ponder: CVID, MAC and Alpha 1 ,to name a few. It wouldn't be so bad if the docs came up with just 1 cure for every 3 new lung diseases. Unfortunately, medicine is good at identifying and cataloging new diseases but so much at treating them. I wonder if by the time I die from lung disease, it will be a newly discovered disease, and will bear my name.
Hi @bennb023 I wanted to join @waterboy and @joelars in welcoming you to Connect.
I wanted to share the following discussion and additional group as you may be able to learn from what others have said and may be able to find support.
Copd, pulmonary fibrosis, mac bacterial infection and honeycomb lung - https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/copd-pulmonary-fibrosis-mac-bacterial-infection-and-honeycomb-lung/
MAC & Bronchiectasis - https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/mac-bronchiectasis/
How long since you were diagnosed with these various conditions?
@ethanconkey
I meant to welcome @bennb023 and @ waterboy in the group, as well and I hope my attempt at humor didn't offend you.
I was diagnosed by positive sputum cultures and the colony was visible in a ct.
Thank you for the welcome. I was diagnosed with copd in 2004, cvid in 2017,and Mac in 2015. Please don’t worry. Not offended by your humor. I think we need a big dose of humor to help deal with all of this!
Thank you for the share and welcome. I am greatful for any and all info.
Hi @benn023 My diagnosis was pneumonia. I completed antibiotic treatments. the follow up x ray showed a small area of infiltrate which the doc said is lingering pneumonia. He prescribed antibiotics. I just finished those and I'm scheduled for the follow up ct next week. My question is what is the difference between pneumonia and CVOD and MAC
I read that cvid and mac are autoimmune diseases that may be but don't have to be related to copd. Is this true and if so does this mean that unlike copd it may be curable"