Bronchiectasis is a common lung disease characterised by chronic infection in small airways that results in some parts of the lung becoming damaged, scarred and dilated, allowing infected mucus to build up in pockets.
Bronchiectasis is a common lung disease characterised by chronic infection in small airways that results in some parts of the lung becoming damaged, scarred and dilated, allowing infected mucus to build up in pockets.
Bronchiectasis is caused by chronic infection of the airways. This infection is generally thought to be from bacteria. The persistent airway infection and the immune response results in chronic inflammation. This inflammation damages the lung and results in the symptoms of bronchiectasis.
Conditions associated with bronchiectasis include:
The most common symptom of bronchiectasis is a cough that’s chronic (it doesn’t go away) and productive (it brings up phlegm/mucus). Bronchiectasis causes people to cough up large amounts of mucus. The mucus is sometimes yellow or green and it sometimes smells bad.
Other symptoms of bronchiectasis include:
You doctor will ask lots of questions about you and your symptoms. If your doctor suspects you may have bronchiectasis, you will have some tests, which are likely to include:
Occasionally, your health care professional will suggest a bronchoscopy – using a camera in a narrow tube – to look inside your lungs and take samples.
Sometimes you’ll have further tests, including genetic blood tests, to try to find out why you’ve developed bronchiectasis.
Antibiotics
If you get a chest infection or have a flare-up, you’ll take a course of antibiotics, often for 14 days.
Clearing your sputum
Clearing sputum from your lungs is very important and can reduce the number of infections you have and reduce your cough.
Chest physical therapy is a way of loosening the mucus in your chest. People usually do chest physical therapy while sitting or lying with their heads down (postural drainage). The therapy helps loosen the mucus, and lying with your head down helps the mucus drain away from your lungs.
After you’ve loosened the mucus, it’s easier to cough it up. People with bronchiectasis often do CPT and cough up mucus three or four times a day. There are different ways of doing chest physical therapy:
There are also breathing exercises that help loosen mucus.
If your sputum is sticky, and hard to cough up, your health care professional may suggest:
People with bronchiectasis can get flare-ups, times when their symptoms are worse. If you have bronchiectasis, stay as healthy as possible by: