Call 911or other emergency services now if:
Call your doctor immediately or go
to the emergency room if you have been diagnosed with
COPD and you:
- Cough up
0.5 cup (120 ml) or more of
blood.
- Have shortness of breath or wheezing that is quickly getting
worse.
- Start having new chest pain.
- Are coughing more deeply or more often, especially if you notice
an increase in mucus (sputum) or a change in the color of the
mucus you cough up.
- Have increased swelling in your legs or belly.
- Have a high fever [over
101
°
F (38.3
°
C)].
- Develop flu-like symptoms.
If your symptoms (cough, mucus, and/or shortness of breath)
suddenly get worse and stay worse, you may be having a
COPD flare-up, or exacerbation. Quick treatment for a
flare-up may help keep you out of the hospital.
Call your doctor soonfor an appointment if:
- Your medicine is not working as well as it had been.
- Your symptoms are slowly getting worse, and you have not seen a
doctor recently.
- You have a cold and:
- Your fever lasts longer than 2 to 3 days.
- Breathlessness occurs or becomes noticeably worse.
- Your cough gets worse or lasts longer than 7 to 10 days.
- You have not been diagnosed with COPD but are having symptoms. A
history of smoking (even in the past) greatly increases the likelihood that
symptoms are from COPD.
- You cough up any amount of blood.
Talk to your doctor
If
you have been diagnosed with COPD, talk with your doctor at your next regular
appointment about:
- Help to stop smoking. To review tips on how to stop smoking, see
the topic
Quitting Smoking.
- A yearly
flu shot.
- A pneumonia shot. Usually, people need only one shot. But
doctors recommend a second one for some people who got their first shot before
they turned 65.
- An exercise program or
pulmonary rehabilitation.
- Any updates of your medicines or treatment that you may
need.
Who to See
Health professionals who can diagnose
COPD and provide a basic treatment plan include:
You may need to see a specialist in lung disease, called
a
pulmonologist (say "pool-muh-NAWL-uh-jist"),
if:
- Your diagnosis of COPD is uncertain or hard to make because you
have
diseases with similar symptoms.
- You have unusual symptoms that are not usually seen in people
with COPD.
- You are younger than 50 and/or have no history or a short
history of cigarette smoking.
- You have to go to the hospital often because of sudden
increases in shortness of breath.
- You need long-term
oxygen or
corticosteroid therapy.
- You and your doctor are considering surgery, such as a lung
transplant or
lung volume reduction.