How is bronchial disease to return a responsibility
summary
Bronchiectasis is very common in daily life, but I don't know when he will have symptoms of bronchiectasis because I don't know much about it. Symptoms: early bronchial lesions are small and mild, no obvious lesions, lesions can be heard and rales after continuous expectoration, rales can temporarily disappear. 2、 Fever: repeated infection can cause systemic poisoning. Early fever, when the secretion of inflammation, pneumonia, poor transmission and drainage, lung abscess, empyema or pleurisy, high fever patients. Now let me tell you what happened.
How is bronchial disease to return a responsibility
First, infection and bronchial obstruction, repeated bronchial and pulmonary infection, bronchial obstruction, damage, deformation, wall dilatation. Left lower lobe and right middle lobe. Due to the slender left lower lobe bronchus, compression due to cardiovascular reasons, poor drainage and secondary infection of surrounding lymph nodes in the right middle lobe, it is also easy to cause poor drainage and bronchiectasis.
Second: about 80% of the patients are 10 years old before the onset of the disease, and most of the children suffer from pertussis, measles or pneumonia. About one third of the patients have recurrent acute respiratory infections. The severity of symptoms is related to the severity of the disease. This needs attention.
Third: bronchiectasis can be divided into congenital and secondary, is a rare congenital, due to congenital bronchopulmonary dysplasia, congenital defects or genetic diseases, the peripheral lung can not further develop, leading to the development of bronchiectasis, such as bronchial cartilage hypoplasia syndrome), bronchiectasis occurred after birth, but there are also congenital abnormalities It's plain.
matters needing attention
Due to the destruction of parietal muscles and elastic components, the abnormal, irreversible dilation and lumen deformation of medium-sized bronchus were formed. Most of the diseases are postnatal, mostly in children and adolescents. Most patients had acute and chronic respiratory tract infection and bronchial obstruction. The patient had a history of measles, pertussis or bronchopneumonia.