Author Topic: Bronchitis Antibiotics: Why and How I Quit Smoking  (Read 65 times)

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Bronchitis Antibiotics: Why and How I Quit Smoking
« on: August 13, 2016, 02:54:41 am »
Bronchitis Antibiotics - Why and How I Quit Smoking
Don't remember the day I started smoking, but I do remember why. My husband smoked. When we kissed, he tasted like a full ashtray smells. I started smoking so that that wouldn't bother me so much, but I knew better.

All Through High School, P.E
And health teachers preached the deleterious effects of tobacco smoke on the body. Television, newspapers, magazines, doctors, and the Surgeon General all reported that cigarette smoking caused cancer, emphysema, and many other health problems. I didn't need to hear or read their stories. Both my parents have smoked since their teens. I saw firsthand what smoking does to the smoker.

After gathering all the cigarettes I had, I went to the kitchen and carefully destroyed each one, then dropped it into the trash can. By evening I was suffering, but I refused to buy more. Later, I learned my brother-in-law had just quit smoking. He told me to buy salted, roasted sunflower seeds in the shell. Prevention measures for acute bronchitis proved to be a gamble to us. This is because there simply seemed to be nothing to write about in the beginning of writing. It was only in the process of writing did we get more and more to write on Chronic Bronchitis.

Learning to smoke was difficult for me. I had so many reasons not to, that I really had to push to get it done. After years and years of second hand smoke exposure, my health began to deteriorate immediately. By the end of the first year, I had chronic bronchitis. Cigarettes became a crutch. If life was stressful, I smoked. If I was ill, I smoked. If everything was great, I smoked. My habit was so bad, I couldn't drive down the street or cook a meal without smoking. The first thing I did in the morning was light a cigarette. The last thing I did at night was put one out.

Was Terrified
If I had not wakened from the smell "oil pulling" fabric, I might have died, or at least been badly burned. The new skirt I was wearing had eight holes burned through it. The folds of fabric had protected my skin until I awoke. When I realized that I had risked my life, and ruined a brand new skirt, anger replaced the terror I felt--anger at myself. So after reading what we have mentioned here on Chronic Bronchitis, it is up to you to provide your verdict as to what exactly it is that you find fascinating here. :D.

Don't remember the day I started smoking, but I'll never forget the day I stopped. On June 2, 1986, I dumped the worst habit I have ever had. Was it worth it? You bet. I no longer have pneumonia every year. Though bronchitis still bothers me on occasion, and I have chronic asthma, most of the time I can breathe without trouble. Best of all, my husband quit, too, within a month of the date that I quit. We have had a smoke free home for more than 20 years, and we have both benefitted from it. There are many varieties of Bronchitis found today. However, we have stuck to the description of only one variety to prevent confusion!

Soon, clothes with tiny circles burned into the fabric became the norm. I couldn't breathe easily if I walked further than out to my car. I couldn't play ball with my children; I didn't have the breath. Many times I decided to quit. And I would, for two or three hours. By the end of the second year, I had had three bouts of pneumonia. There is a vast ocean of knowledge connected with Chronic Bronchitis. What is included here can be considered a fraction of this knowledge!

Nicotine stained fingers, face, and teeth are just the beginning. Besides the offensive smell, there is the layer of nicotine that stains everything in the smoker's home:, furniture, walls, carpets, everything. On several different occasions, both my parents were extremely sick with illnesses directly attributable to smoking, eventually culminating in lung cancer for my dad. Cigarettes were so important to them, that they budgeted the smokes in with groceries. If money was tight, we ate beans and potatoes, but they never did without cigarettes. I promised myself in my teens that I would never smoke. I broke that promise sometime in the summer of 1981. Looking for something logical on Chronic Bronchitis, we stumbled on the information provided here. Look out for anything illogical here. :o.
Bronchitis - Natural Ayurvedic Home Remedies




"Suck the salt off and spit out the seeds," he said. "Salt cuts the craving for nicotine."  It worked. For six weeks, I carried sunflower seeds around with me. Anytime I started to crave a cigarette, I popped four or five sunflower seeds in my mouth. The times I felt foolish for constantly having sunflower seeds in my mouth, I would just remember the new skirt I had thrown away. Don't misunderstand. Quitting cigarettes was the hardest thing I ever did, but I was more determined than I had ever been.

What Does COPD Mean?
COPD stands for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.  It encompasses two types of disease processes namely chronic bronchitis and emphysema.  Quite often, people who suffer from COPD show a combination of features of both disease processes.  In lay person's term, COPD means persistent lung disease with features of airway narrowing.  To be more specific, bronchitis means inflammation of the bronchi or the larger airways of the lungs whereas emphysema means destruction to the smaller airways and alveoli or airsacs of the lungs.  Thus COPD is commonly used to describe chronic bronchitis, emphysema, or both.

What are the Symptoms of COPD?
The two main symptoms are cough and breathlessness.  COPD sufferers commonly complain about breathlessness and cough that develop gradually over a long period of time.  The cough that COPD sufferer gets are usually productive which means they commonly cough up phlegm.  The cough usually comes and goes initially but tends to become persistent as time passes.  Breathlessness is usually intermittent and only occurs with exertion in the beginning, however if you continue to smoke, the breathlessness persists even when you are at rest, this can be quite distressing!  Other symptoms are chronic sputum production, where you constantly cough up phlegm all day and recurrent chest infection.  People with COPD are more prone to chest infection for obvious reasons, as the lining in the lung looses its normal defense mechanism against intruding bugs. As the information we produce in our writing on Bronchitis Common may be utilized by the reader for informative purposes, it is very important that the information we provide be true. We have indeed maintained this.

COPD a Common Condition?
It is one of the commonest conditions that require hospital admission during period of flare-ups.  According to one epidemiology study in the US, approximately eight million people have chronic bronchitis whereas 2 million people have emphysema.  As we can see, chronic bronchitis is more common than emphysema.

What are the Causes of COPD?
Smoking.  Smoking is the number 1 cause of COPD.  More than 90 percent of COPDs are caused by smoking, cigarette or otherwise.  About 30 percent of long term smokers will eventually show symptoms of COPD of varying degrees.  Other causes include air pollution and inherited enzyme deficiency namely alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency. Isn't it amazing how much information can be transferred through a single page? So much stands to gain, and to lose about Chronic Bronchitis through a single page. :D.

What tests are needed to diagnose COPD?  A test called spirometry is often performed to diagnose COPD.  Bronchodilators (drugs that cause the airway to dilate) are usually added to confirm the diagnosis.  If the test result does not show improvement with bronchodilators, then COPD is very likely. :)

What are the Treatments of COPD?
First of all.  Stop smoking.  This cannot be stressed enough.  Smoking cessation is the first thing you have to do if you want to get better.  As the underlying mechanism of COPD is irreversible, medications are used with an aim to slow down it's progress.  Drugs that are commonly used to treat COPD include short-acting bronchodilator inhalers (i.e.  salbutamol), long-acting bronchodilator inhalers (i.e.  tiotropium), steroid inhalers and tablets are all available drugs for treatment of COPD.  Again, no treatment is more important that stop smoking.  Lung transplant is the last option and should be reserved for people with severe COPD. It is rather inviting to go on writing on Bronchitis. however as there is a limitation to the number of words to be written, we have confined ourselves to this. However, do enjoy yourself reading it.

COPD sounds like asthma, are they any different?  Yes.  Both COPD and asthma cause similar symptoms, however, they are different in certain ways. COPD causes permanent damage to the airways.  The obstruction is 'fixed', hence it is irreversible in general terms.  However, airway narrowing in asthma is intermittent and reverses quite easily with medication.  Having said that, both COPD and asthma is common, people who suffer COPD can have an asthmatic component and vice versa. Time and tide waits for no man. So once we got an idea for writing on Chronic Bronchitis, we decided not to waste time, but to get down to writing about it immediately!

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