13 years ago, he was admitted to hospital for breathing difficulty & the chest xray revealed...
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...an infection in the right lung. the infective process compounded by damage due to years of smoking resulted in mr H suffering from recurrent chest ailments. each time he recovered with a course of antibiotics, bronchodilators & steroids but this recent attack 3 weeks back must have been the last straw.
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although the chest xray actually looked better than previous ones, he didn't improve with the usual medications, & needed to be put on a ventilator...
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- he was persistently out of breath, as if he had just completed long-distance running.
efforts to take him off the ventilator proved futile, so the next step was to create a little hole in his windpipe (tracheostomy)...
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which helps him breathe easier & facilitate nursing care as well. with this, he took a whole week to improve & even then, it was with a little help from this BIPAP device...
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...a compact piece of equipment that bridges the recovery process between total dependence on a ventilator & being able to breath without aid.
today, he's breathing on his own with the tracheostomy tube still in place. he will be transferred to a hospital-based nursing home where the tube will eventually be removed.
3 weeks in ICU with a barrage of tests, procedures & medication, i hope the bill doesn't trigger another attack....
6 comments:
Ouch... poor dude.
But then, kicking the cigarette habit is easier said then done. Better not to start.
There are ever more young well- informed smokers today than ever. Is it the cool confidence,"that it won't happen to me" attitude?
Jonzz,
well said.
however, i must admit that i have a few colleagues who quit very quickly after getting a health scare.
Iml,
if they live long enough, COAD will most likely catch up with them. that's when their "live for today" mantra will backfire.
sounds scary...
*shrugs*
but have yet to see a case like dat ler...
my hosp small gua..don get to see cases like this
Mich,
a case like this can drain a small hospital's resources rapidly, maybe that's why your hospital refers such a case to general hosp.
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