Exercise and Diet Help Me Manage COPD Symptoms and Live a Healthier Life | HealthInfi - HealthInfi | We Secure Your Health

Friday, 1 December 2017

Exercise and Diet Help Me Manage COPD Symptoms and Live a Healthier Life | HealthInfi

I have emphysema, as well as chronic bronchitis and an asthma component. I smoked for 30 years and quit in 1992, mostly because I realized that I was organizing my entire day at work around when I could smoke. I decided that was pretty stupid, so I got the patches and quit. I had never tried to quit before; I had cut back occasionally, but I never really tried to quit until I actually did it.
When I quit, I was already having difficulty with my breathing. Going up stairs was very difficult and going up a lot of stairs (like at a concert or football game) was awful. When I quit smoking, I started exercising, mostly to see whether I had any lungs left and also to try to avoid the weight gain so many people often experience. I exercised religiously for about two and a half years, but then started getting respiratory infections that made it really difficult to exercise.
I went to my family doctor in 2000 because I was having trouble breathing. Walking any distance was hard, and going up stairs was something I avoided like the plague. I think I saw my basement maybe once a week if I was lucky.A  My doctor diagnosed me with asthma and prescribed a couple of inhalers. One of them made me cough so hard that I went back for something different. He then prescribed a bronchodilator, an inhaled steroid and albuterol for rescue. At that point, I knew it was probably COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). I knew I had chronic bronchitis; every time I caught anything it went right to my chest.
Unfortunately, not exercising and feeling sorry for myself resulted in a significant weight gain over the next several years. In September 2002, my husband and I made a trip to Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks. The altitude nearly did me in. Walking any distance was very difficult, showering was really hard and actually doing anything was really out of the question. I did manage to go on a float trip, but the effort required was incredible, and my inability to do much of anything was becoming very embarrassing for me.
When we got home, I promptly caught something and ended up in my doc’s office for my usual antibiotic, and he put me on oxygen, 24/7. I had an oxygen concentrator at home, a concentrator in my office and portable tanks for everything else.
Things continued to deteriorate. By February 2003, I was having trouble showering completely because breathing was so difficult, making the bed was a 20-minute activity requiring lots of resting, and I hadn’t been downstairs to the basement in weeks. One Sunday morning, I had to get out of the shower before I could rinse the shampoo out of my hair. The next morning, I knew I couldn’t shower at all.
I finally got dressed and on my way to work realized that I was in real trouble. I called my PCP and asked if he wanted me to go to his office or the ER. His staff told me to come to the office. We  had a really wet snow the night before and then it froze solid; typical Iowa weather.A  When I got to the clinic, I did something I had never done before; I parked in a handicapped parking place.
Between my oxygen tank, my purse and the struggle to get out of the car, I had to wait to catch my breath for a good three or four minutes before I dared to try to walk across the rutted driveway to the front door. When I finally got inside, I sort of collapsed on the sofa and just gasped catching my breath. The two ladies at the desk asked if I was all right, and, being really proud (and stupid), I gasped that I was fine.Read More

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