Tag Archives: respiratory

Do Lung Doctors in Kitsap County Neglect Support Group Patient Education, part 2

Obstructive Sleep Apnea is serious.  A recent Swiss study shows that even a short break in using the CPAP is harmful:

“Within 14 days, they had significant increases in heart rate and blood pressure, and deterioration in vascular function.  The results suggest that even a short break in CPAP therapy has a negative effect on the cardiovascular system … OSA patients need to continuously use CPAP….” …according to US News and World Report.  Presumably, that goes for those of us on the BIPAP machine too.

Then there is  …

  1.  Lack of treatment can lead to mental confusion, dementia and Alzheimer’s.

A physician could have answered the questions that ensued.

  1. New Medicare rules say the patient must be on the machine 4 hours a night for the entire CPAP or BIPAP rental period – no matter what – or lose the machine.

As a patient with RLS, I take meds for – Mirapex that no longer works – that is worrisome.  The fact is sometimes I cannot stay in bed where the only relief from RLS is to stand up and/or walk.

When I asked about the 4-hour Medicare rule when a person has other medical conditions, I was told I had to make the choice – the BIPAP or RLS. – Not a choice at all for me and many patients like me.

A plus here is that the last session was so bad that I spent the entire night standing up using my laptop at the kitchen counter and came to the conclusion  I think a food allergy may play a part in my RLS problem.  I will talk to my doctor about it.

Harrison has a superb respiratory department team – professional people, open and transparent.  Patients need to be educated and Harrison is stepping up with professionals educating us….but we need more physician involvement to answer the tough medical questions for pulmonary support group patients.  In Kitsap County, it is past time for physician pulmonary education now.

COPD and Sleep Apnea is a huge medical dilemma where ignorance might well be bliss for the patient…but not in the long term.  What happens when we do not get oxygen to our organs?

For starters, we lose brain cells without the oxygen to sustain them.  Our lessor organs begin to fail because the larger organs grab the available oxygen first.

Incontinence is only one of many issues that can occur from lack of oxygen to organs…

No doubt, most of my brain cells are long gone so I have one less thing to think about.  My point here is to suggest you not to lose yours if it can be avoided.  Patient education is key to having the best quality of life possible with any medical condition and we NEED lung support group physician involvement.

http://pugetsoundblogs.com/copd-and-other-stuff/2011/08/13/do-lung-doctors-in-kitsap-county-neglect-support-group-patient-education/

The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute have more about sleep apnea treatments.

Copyright © 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/SleepApnea/SleepApnea_Treatments.html

http://health.usnews.com/health-news/family-health/sleep/articles/2011/08/12/sleep-apnea-makes-quick-return-when-treatment-stops

Better Breather’s meeting Wednesday… http://www.harrisonmedical.org/home/calendar/4897

If anyone needs a ride, let me know…the car is super clean.

Thanks for reading… Sharon O’Hara

 

 

We all cheer for the GREAT MEDICAL CARE  already in Kitsap County…and for more Pulmonary Physician support group education.

FREE Oximeter Readings and FREE Take Home Pic Flow Meter – Lung Patients Meet at the Rose Room – Harrison Silverdale

The oximeter is a wonderful aid to lung patients and Harrison’s BB meeting this month – Wednesday – will offer a spirometry reading to each of us attending.  PLUS!  Harrison’s gifted respiratory folks will teach us how to use the Pic Flow Meter AND send one home with each of us!

http://healthguide.howstuffworks.com/peak-flow-meter-picture-a.htm

Harrison and the  American Lung Association’s Better Breathers look at ALL aspects of lung disease and welcomes all of us – not just the third leading cause of death in the US, COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)  Many of us have more than one lung disease diagnosis often leading to heart disease.

If you have an oximeter, they’ll be glad to check the calibration – I’m bringing mine.

I’m also bringing a few extra copies of the Harrison spin off the Old Guy made up for me to use for daily health readings to give to my doctor – in case anyone wants one.

***

Wednesday, April 20 – 1:00pm – 3:00pm

Harrison Medical Center – Better Breathers Support Group

Our Better Breathers support group encompasses community members and their caregivers who live with chronic respiratory disease and lung disease. Better Breathers is designed to provide support, education, networking, and tools to improve the daily lives of those living with these health conditions.

We welcome any community member with asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, sarcoidosis, asbestosis, pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary fibrosis and the many more lung diseases affecting our population, pediatric or adult.

Please email or call if you will need assistance with parking at the meeting.

This Support Group is held the third Wednesday of each month.

4/20/2011 1:00pm – 3:00pm

Rose Room

Harrison Silverdale

1800 NW Myhre Road

Silverdale, WA 98383

Contact Info

Pamela O’Flynn * 360-744-6685 * respiratorycare@harrisonmedical.org

If anyone needs a ride let me know.  360-337-1454

Hope to see you Wednesday….thanks for listening… Sharon O’Hara

Emergency Preparedness Seminar for Respiratory Folks in Silverdale

Learning Respiratory Emergency Care —including folks dependent on the c-pap, bi-pap, concentrators and their caregivers—yes!

Right here in Silverdale, thanks to Harrison Medical Center, learn how best to take care of ourselves during an emergency on Wednesday, 19 January 2011.

My husband and I have already learned how ill-prepared we were when every safeguard we had failed, one after the other.
Heat pumps, propane insert stove and generator.

If anyone needs a ride to the seminar in Silverdale, let me know.

Patients, caregivers and those who help us help ourselves—working together for a common goal!

Emergency Preparedness

It’s time for us to get prepared!  We’ve had a rough winter already and there may be more to come.

Let’s make a New Years commitment to ourselves and to our health; to be as prepared as possible to take care of our needs during extreme weather conditions or other local emergencies.

Come and meet with us for our first 2011 meeting and share you own personal experiences and ideas as well.

Speaker:  Laura Jull Emergency Preparedness Manager

Harrison Medical Center

Topics: One Month Preparedness Calendar

Medication, Oxygen, Extended Power Outages & Additional Tips.

***

Speaker: Pamela O’Flynn, Respiratory Therapy Department Director

Harrison Medical Center

Director O’Flynn has first hand experience with the importance of
emergency response and services.

Date: 01-19-2011
Time: 1:00PM
Location: Harrison Medical Center – Silverdale Campus – Rose Room

Harrison Medical Center
Phone:  360 744-6685

Harrison Respiratory Care

Dedicated To Every Breath You Take

See you Wednesday!

More later…. Sharon O’Hara

Dr. Tom Speaks … Like it or Not

If COPD has a living guru in this nation, it is Thomas L. Petty, MD.

The following message is important and can save lives through early detection. Dr. Tom’s comment, “COPD is associated with numerous co-morbidities, and indeed, the entire body may become involved” is spot on….believe it… YES!

Since COPD diagnosis, then landing in the hospital in 1997, I have gone from being healthy and fit into my fifties to COPD and another EIGHT medical conditions. Each has its own set of ‘rules’. If I take pain pills for the Cellulites, I know that my respiratory system will be adversely affected….not a good thing with two lung diseases. The latest medication, Diovan, adds to the mix.

The point is that a COPD diagnosis is only the beginning of a medical adventure that need not happen with early detection…the simple Spirometry test.

Please, read Dr. Tom’s comments.
*****************************************
COPD Progress and Challenges 2009

By Thomas L. Petty, MD

In the four decades I’ve devoted to lung health, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease has been slow to excite the practicing physician. Yet COPD should create great enthusiasm because we have made so many advances in identification and treatment. Many new therapies are available that are effective and favorably influence the disease.

COPD is associated with numerous co-morbidities, and indeed, the entire body may become involved.1It is now regarded as a systemic disease.2Traditionally; COPD has included emphysema (loss of alveolar walls and loss of elastic recoil), chronic bronchitis, inflammation in the small and large airways, and various degrees of lung inflammation throughout the lung parenchyma.

More recently, bronchiectasis has been added to this spectrum, although there are significant differences in manifestations and pathogenesis with repeated bacterial infections playing a more prominent role in bronchiectasis than with emphysema and chronic bronchitis.

Spirometry’s significance

COPD is characterized by irreversible airflow obstruction as judged by simple spirometry. Only the FEV1is needed to judge the severity of airflow obstruction, although a number of other measurements of airflow volume and gas transfer (diffusion test) are commonly undertaken to assess the disease states in more detail.

Spirometry is used to monitor the course of disease. All physicians who treat COPD should have immediate access to spirometers, including primary care practitioners because of their growing involvement in COPD managment.

The benefits and barriers to spirometry have been summarized.3For some reason, there appears to be an unfortunate bias against spirometry, particularly in the diagnosis and assessment of early disease. This is where treatment has the opportunity to do the most good. It is astonishing that only 37 percent of hospitalized patients had a spirometric diagnosis of COPD at the time of a hospitalization for an exacerbation.4

Established therapies

Early diagnosis can change outcome of disease through smoking cessation and the selective use of a growing body of pharmacologic agents.5The pathogenesis of COPD relates to interaction of a complex array of genetic abnormalities under current study, interacting with environmental factors, most notably smoking, other dusts, and volatile compounds involved in various industries on a worldwide basis. Treatment focuses on eliminating these environmental factors.

Medications that are most useful in COPD are comparable to those used in asthma with reversible airflow obstruction. Thus, inhaled beta-agonists, corticosteroids, and in selected cases, anticholinergics are widely used in achieving better scientific scaffolding. Oral corticosteroids seem particularly effective in slowing the progress of disease.6

Active patients

Oxygen is established as an effective method of increasing not only the length, but quality of life for patients with COPD. At least 140,000 people with COPD and related disorders benefit from oxygen therapy in the U.S. alone. Ambulatory oxygen systems allow full activity, and they should be equipped with a pulse oximeter in order to monitor therapy’s effectiveness.

Portable oxygen concentrators are now approved for air travel. Most weigh about 10 pounds and deliver oxygen only by the demand mode; however, one exception weighs 17 pounds and gives up to 1 to 3 Liters of continuous flow.

Pulmonary rehabilitation is established as improving the exercise tolerance of many with COPD. Controlled clinical trials show pulmonary rehabilitation improves depression, anxiety, and somatic preoccupation, which are particularly common in the early stages of disease.7Most pulmonologists can provide the necessary breathing training, assistance in graded exercise, and other components that are key to patient and family education.

The future involves increased awareness of COPD among patients, physicians, and other health care providers.

COPD is the only disease increasing in morbidity and mortality among the top five killers, and by 2010, it is expected to become the third most common cause of death in the U.S. It resulted in direct and indirect losses of $30.4 billion to the U.S. economy in 2001. Approximately 16 million adult Americans have COPD, and it is very likely that a similar number have asymptomatic or even symptomatic lung disease that is neither diagnosed nor treated.

Thomas L. Petty, MD, MACP, Master FCCP, is chairman emeritus of the National Lung Health Education Program, Denver.
http://respiratory-care-sleep-medicine.advanceweb.com/Article/COPD-Progress-and-Challenges-2009.aspx

My next blog post will put money where my mouth is in a challenge to join me to prove that patients educated about their disease/s WILL make whatever lifestyle changes needed for the best health possible.

More later… Sharon O’Hara

Dr. Tom Speaks … Like it or Not

If COPD has a living guru in this nation, it is Thomas L. Petty, MD.

The following message is important and can save lives through early detection. Dr. Tom’s comment, “COPD is associated with numerous co-morbidities, and indeed, the entire body may become involved” is spot on….believe it… YES!

Since COPD diagnosis, then landing in the hospital in 1997, I have gone from being healthy and fit into my fifties to COPD and another EIGHT medical conditions. Each has its own set of ‘rules’. If I take pain pills for the Cellulites, I know that my respiratory system will be adversely affected….not a good thing with two lung diseases. The latest medication, Diovan, adds to the mix.

The point is that a COPD diagnosis is only the beginning of a medical adventure that need not happen with early detection…the simple Spirometry test.

Please, read Dr. Tom’s comments.
*****************************************
COPD Progress and Challenges 2009

By Thomas L. Petty, MD

In the four decades I’ve devoted to lung health, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease has been slow to excite the practicing physician. Yet COPD should create great enthusiasm because we have made so many advances in identification and treatment. Many new therapies are available that are effective and favorably influence the disease.

COPD is associated with numerous co-morbidities, and indeed, the entire body may become involved.1It is now regarded as a systemic disease.2Traditionally; COPD has included emphysema (loss of alveolar walls and loss of elastic recoil), chronic bronchitis, inflammation in the small and large airways, and various degrees of lung inflammation throughout the lung parenchyma.

More recently, bronchiectasis has been added to this spectrum, although there are significant differences in manifestations and pathogenesis with repeated bacterial infections playing a more prominent role in bronchiectasis than with emphysema and chronic bronchitis.

Spirometry’s significance

COPD is characterized by irreversible airflow obstruction as judged by simple spirometry. Only the FEV1is needed to judge the severity of airflow obstruction, although a number of other measurements of airflow volume and gas transfer (diffusion test) are commonly undertaken to assess the disease states in more detail.

Spirometry is used to monitor the course of disease. All physicians who treat COPD should have immediate access to spirometers, including primary care practitioners because of their growing involvement in COPD managment.

The benefits and barriers to spirometry have been summarized.3For some reason, there appears to be an unfortunate bias against spirometry, particularly in the diagnosis and assessment of early disease. This is where treatment has the opportunity to do the most good. It is astonishing that only 37 percent of hospitalized patients had a spirometric diagnosis of COPD at the time of a hospitalization for an exacerbation.4

Established therapies

Early diagnosis can change outcome of disease through smoking cessation and the selective use of a growing body of pharmacologic agents.5The pathogenesis of COPD relates to interaction of a complex array of genetic abnormalities under current study, interacting with environmental factors, most notably smoking, other dusts, and volatile compounds involved in various industries on a worldwide basis. Treatment focuses on eliminating these environmental factors.

Medications that are most useful in COPD are comparable to those used in asthma with reversible airflow obstruction. Thus, inhaled beta-agonists, corticosteroids, and in selected cases, anticholinergics are widely used in achieving better scientific scaffolding. Oral corticosteroids seem particularly effective in slowing the progress of disease.6

Active patients

Oxygen is established as an effective method of increasing not only the length, but quality of life for patients with COPD. At least 140,000 people with COPD and related disorders benefit from oxygen therapy in the U.S. alone. Ambulatory oxygen systems allow full activity, and they should be equipped with a pulse oximeter in order to monitor therapy’s effectiveness.

Portable oxygen concentrators are now approved for air travel. Most weigh about 10 pounds and deliver oxygen only by the demand mode; however, one exception weighs 17 pounds and gives up to 1 to 3 Liters of continuous flow.

Pulmonary rehabilitation is established as improving the exercise tolerance of many with COPD. Controlled clinical trials show pulmonary rehabilitation improves depression, anxiety, and somatic preoccupation, which are particularly common in the early stages of disease.7Most pulmonologists can provide the necessary breathing training, assistance in graded exercise, and other components that are key to patient and family education.

The future involves increased awareness of COPD among patients, physicians, and other health care providers.

COPD is the only disease increasing in morbidity and mortality among the top five killers, and by 2010, it is expected to become the third most common cause of death in the U.S. It resulted in direct and indirect losses of $30.4 billion to the U.S. economy in 2001. Approximately 16 million adult Americans have COPD, and it is very likely that a similar number have asymptomatic or even symptomatic lung disease that is neither diagnosed nor treated.

Thomas L. Petty, MD, MACP, Master FCCP, is chairman emeritus of the National Lung Health Education Program, Denver.
http://respiratory-care-sleep-medicine.advanceweb.com/Article/COPD-Progress-and-Challenges-2009.aspx

My next blog post will put money where my mouth is in a challenge to join me to prove that patients educated about their disease/s WILL make whatever lifestyle changes needed for the best health possible.

More later… Sharon O’Hara