What is the ideal home for the respiratory patient?

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  • Опубліковано 24 лип 2018
  • A drop in temperature can be the difference between easy breathing and having deterioration in symptoms, with difficult breathing and poor quality of life
    Extreme cold weather can be dangerous for those who live with COPD. Not only cold and windy days cause fatigue and shortness of breath. This climate has been associated with higher hospital admissions. The reason that has been argued is that the blood vessels contract and the tissues get less oxygen. The warm weather has always had good fame but in real life, it is necessary to evaluate it with caution. It generates less bronchoconstriction, but if it is associated with high humidity or extreme temperature it can generate pulmonary deterioration.
    Obtaining the ideal climate for each patient is of great help. In relation to height, housing changes close to sea level generate few changes; above 700 meters above sea level, it is generating greater difficulty when breathing.
    With regard to clean air, areas of pollution with particulate material should be avoided, which can aggravate the respiratory patient, the symptoms and the progression of the disease.
    At higher altitudes your body needs to work more to take the same amount of oxygen as when it is at sea level.
    Over 1500 meters oxygen may be needed depending on the severity of the symptoms.
    The air at higher altitudes is cooler, less dense and with less oxygen.
    This means that you need to take more breaths to achieve the same amount of oxygen as at low altitude.
    Where to go and what to avoid
    When looking for a place to live in a pulmonary patient, this friendly climate should lean to hot or cold but in a mild way.
    With the right temperature, a beach would be an excellent location. A pollution-free area is better than a very congested city. Each country has areas with low humidity, adequate temperature and in low areas.
    If you want to know more about the world of pulmonology and expand learning about lung diseases go to the website pulmoncritico.co
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