The ABCs of COPD

About six years ago, Barbara Hinkle, 67, of La Mesa, California, learned she had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Her COPD flare-ups grew increasingly frequent and severe, and in February she had a frightening episode. “I struggled one night, all night, and ended up calling 911 myself, because it felt like I wasn’t going to take another breath,” she says. “It was the scariest thing that ever happened to me in my life.”
COPD is a catch-all term for bronchitis, emphysema and in some cases, chronic asthma. All are associated with airflow obstruction, says Andrew Ries, a professor of family medicine and preventive medicine at the University of California–San Diego. While some patients have a lot of coughing and phlegm, breathlessness is the red-flag symptom. “Patients often first notice it with activities — they’re getting older, and they can’t keep up with people their own age on inclines or stairs,” Ries says. “They’re getting more shortness of breath, and their physical activities are getting diminished — and it’s more than just aging.”
There’s no cure for COPDs. The goal is to slow progression as much as possible to maintain quality of life and keep patients from getting worse.
“C” Is for Cigarettes
About 15 million Americans have been diagnosed with COPD, while millions more may have it without realizing it. It’s the third leading cause of death in the United States and a major cause of disability, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Heavy smoking is the common denominator. At least 80 percent of COPD patients are current or former smokers, usually with pack-a-day (or more) habits over many years. Many people struggling with COPD now were kids or teens when the landmark U.S. Surgeon General’s report on the health risks of smoking came out 50 years ago. Back then, smoking was still popular and becoming more so among women. However, COPD is not always due to smoking. A genetic condition called alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency — a lack of a lung-protective enzyme — puts people at higher risk for COPD, specifically, emphysema.
Similar to lung cancer, death rates from COPD are declining — at least in men. From 1999 to 2010, death rates dropped from 57 men per 100,000 men to less than 48 per 100,000, according to the CDC . But rates for women increased slightly in the same period — from about 35 to 36 women per 100,000 women.
“O” Is for Oxygen
Tony Kanzia, 68, has COPD, which nudged him into retirement. After working in the automobile industry in the Chicago area for 35 years, he called it quits. “I couldn’t do my job anymore,” he says. “I couldn’t even walk out to the lot to show people the car; let alone go on a test drive — I needed my oxygen.”
He used to enjoy air travel but the planning — let alone the flights — all became too much. It involved calling the airline in advance and renting an oxygen tank, along with packing his pulse oximeter — a small device that lets people clip a probe on their finger or ear to show how well blood is saturated with oxygen. Kanzia recalls the last straw flight, when even a trip to the restroom became a hazard. To tolerate the expected minute or two without his oxygen, he did breathing exercises before leaving his seat. But when he exited the restroom, the service cart was blocking the aisle, and his oxygen saturation dropped as he waited. Flight attendants saw he was in distress and got him back in his seat.
Many COPD patients manage without oxygen therapy, or only use it as needed. Others with severe COPD rely more heavily on oxygen.
Jean Rommes, 70, a semi-retired consultant and COPD activist in West Des Moines, Iowa, still travels a lot — always with an oxygen tank. Her strategy is to “swallow her pride” and get help as needed to save precious energy. She flies via major airports and uses a wheelchair to get from one concourse to another, although she prefers going by an airport cart with other travelers.
Bunny Music, 70, of Sussex, New Jersey, has used oxygen around the clock for 13 years. She uses liquid oxygen, which she finds easy to carry over her shoulder, rather than a cumbersome gas cylinder (the green tank on wheels). Oxygen concentrators are the third option, but Music says they’re heavy and hard to manage with a walker or cane, and “you can’t depend upon them if your electricity goes off.”
“P” Is for Progressive
To experience how it feels to have COPD, plug your nose and then put a straw in your mouth and try breathing through that, suggests Janet Shaw, 66, of Glendale, Arizona. “That’ll give you an idea of what it’s like — and that’s on good days,” she says with a laugh. “On bad days, it’s harder to breathe.”
In healthy lungs, the air sacs and airways are elastic. Each time you inhale, the air sacs fill up with oxygen and then deflate as you exhale carbon dioxide waste. But with COPD, this elastic quality is lost, and walls between the airways become damaged, thick and inflamed. Narrowed airways can become even more obstructed with dense, excess mucus, making breathing even harder.
For someone who starts smoking as a teen and persists into adulthood, damage can go on quietly for years, Ries says. “Because you have two lungs and a lot of lung reserve, most lung diseases really don’t cause significant problems or symptoms until someone has lost 50 or 60 percent of their lung function.” Then a respiratory problem, even a cold, “pushes them over the age, and that’s in their 50s, 60s and 70s.”
Pneumonia and other respiratory infections often cause symptoms to flare, and COPD care includes keeping up with flu and pneumonia vaccinations.
Early intervention is crucial in staving off COPD progression — so even if you’ve never been diagnosed with COPD, but are having breathlessness or other ongoing respiratory problems, it’s worth going to a doctor to be screened. You’ll likely be given a spirometry test — a noninvasive way to measure lung function. “Anyone who’s got any kind of problem, or is a smoker, [should] see a doctor and get a spirometry test and find out if you have obstruction,” Ries says.
“D” Is for Dealing With It
People with COPD can cope by taking prescription medications, keeping up with treatments, building endurance through exercise, accepting limitations and making adaptations in their homes, like rearranging kitchens so they can sit while preparing food. Many use inhalers with drugs called bronchodilators, like Spiriva, to relax muscles in the lungs and widen the airways. Some people also use inhalers that combine a bronchodilator with a corticosteroid to reduce inflammation — such as Advair and Symbicort.
Lung reduction surgery is sometimes used in severe cases of emphysema. “The surgeons can go in and take out over-expanded parts of the lung, and buy some improvement in symptoms and function for a limited number of patients,” Ries explains. For the most severe COPD, lung transplant is an option to improve function, but it’s not a cure.
It’s possible — and important — to build fitness and endurance if you have COPD, says Ries, also the director of the Pulmonary Rehabilitation Program at UCSD. “One of the cornerstones of rehabilitation efforts is getting people to be physically active,” he says, “because they often get very sedentary because they’re so short of breath.”
For her part, Hinkle swears by the UCSD program, which she started in June. Now she tries to make it to the gym to walk on the treadmill three days a week, and she’s ramping up her speed and intensity. She’s also been introduced to weight machines that will help build up her core strength to support her breathing.
Kanzia’s motto for living with COPD is “improvise and overcome.” He uses an oxygen concentrator with a 50-foot cord so he can move around his house, and his kitchen is organized for success. “I do a lot of cooking, no problem,” he says. “I make a great bowl of spaghetti.” Last week he took his grandchildren to the zoo, with the help of other family members and a portable electric scooter.

Hinkle says necessity has taught her the importance of “recognizing when you need help with things and getting it.” She strives to remain as self-sufficient as possible — while taking care of her elderly father. She continues to gain support and encouragement from other members of her pulmonary rehab group. “It’s nice to know you’re not the only one with these problems,” she says, “regardless of what caused them.”

Lisa Esposito is a Patient Advice reporter at U.S. News. You can follow her on Twitter, connect with her on LinkedIn or email her at lesposito@usnews.com.