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==Overview==
==Overview==
'''Bronchitis''' is an [[inflammation]] of the [[bronchus|bronchi]] (medium-size airways) in the [[lung]]s. ''[[Acute bronchitis]]'' is usually caused by [[virus]]es or [[bacteria]] and may last several days or weeks. '''Chronic bronchitis''' is not necessarily caused by infection and is generally part of a syndrome called [[chronic obstructive pulmonary disease]] (COPD); it is defined clinically as a persistent [[cough]] that produces [[sputum]] (phlegm) and mucus, for at least three months in two consecutive years.
'''Bronchitis''' is an [[inflammation]] of the [[bronchus|bronchi]] (medium-size airways) in the [[lung]]s. ''[[Acute bronchitis]]'' is usually caused by [[virus]]es or [[bacteria]] and may last several days or weeks. '''Chronic bronchitis''' is not necessarily caused by infection and is generally part of a syndrome called [[chronic obstructive pulmonary disease]] (COPD); it is defined clinically as a persistent [[cough]] that produces [[sputum]] (phlegm) and mucus, for at least three months in two consecutive years.
==Historical perspective==
==Historical Perspective==
The terms chronic bronchitis and emphysema were formally defined at the CIBA guest symposium of physicians in 1959. COPD has probably always existed but has been called by different names in the past. Bonet described a condition of  “voluminous lungs” in 1679. Matthew Baillie illustrated an emphysematous lung in 1789 and described the destructive character of the condition.  The term COPD was first used by William Briscoe in 1965 and has gradually overtaken other terms to become established today as the preferred name for this disease.
The terms chronic bronchitis and emphysema were formally defined at the CIBA guest symposium of physicians in 1959. COPD has probably always existed but has been called by different names in the past. Bonet described a condition of  “voluminous lungs” in 1679. Matthew Baillie illustrated an emphysematous lung in 1789 and described the destructive character of the condition.  The term COPD was first used by William Briscoe in 1965 and has gradually overtaken other terms to become established today as the preferred name for this disease.
==Pathophysiology==
==Pathophysiology==
Chronic bronchitis is defined in ''clinical'' terms as a cough with sputum production on most days for 3 months of a year, for 2 consecutive years.<ref name=ohcm>Longmore M, Wilkinson I, Rajagopalan S (2005). ''Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine'', 6ed. [[Oxford University Press]]. pp 188-189. ISBN 0-19-852558-3.</ref>. Chronic bronchitis is hallmarked by [[hyperplasia]] (increased number) and [[hypertrophy]] (increased size) of the goblet cells ([[mucous gland]]) of the airway, resulting in an increase in secretion of mucus which contributes to the airway obstruction.  [[Microscope|Microscopically]] there is [[Infiltration (medical)|infiltration]] of the airway walls with [[Inflammation|inflammatory]] cells, particularly [[neutrophils]]. Inflammation is followed by scarring and remodeling that thickens the walls resulting in narrowing of the small airway. Further progression leads to [[metaplasia]] (abnormal change in the tissue) and [[fibrosis]] (further thickening and scarring) of the lower airway. The consequence of these changes is a limitation of airflow.<ref name=kc>Kumar P, Clark M (2005). ''Clinical Medicine'', 6ed. Elsevier Saunders. pp 900-901. ISBN 0702027634.</ref>.
Chronic bronchitis is defined in clinical terms as a cough with sputum production on most days for 3 months of a year, for 2 consecutive years.<ref name=ohcm>Longmore M, Wilkinson I, Rajagopalan S (2005). ''Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine'', 6ed. [[Oxford University Press]]. pp 188-189. ISBN 0-19-852558-3.</ref>. Chronic bronchitis is hallmarked by [[hyperplasia]] (increased number) and [[hypertrophy]] (increased size) of the goblet cells ([[mucous gland]]) of the airway, resulting in an increase in secretion of mucus which contributes to the airway obstruction.  [[Microscope|Microscopically]] there is [[Infiltration (medical)|infiltration]] of the airway walls with [[Inflammation|inflammatory]] cells, particularly [[neutrophils]]. Inflammation is followed by scarring and remodeling that thickens the walls resulting in narrowing of the small airway. Further progression leads to [[metaplasia]] (abnormal change in the tissue) and [[fibrosis]] (further thickening and scarring) of the lower airway. The consequence of these changes is a limitation of airflow.<ref name=kc>Kumar P, Clark M (2005). ''Clinical Medicine'', 6ed. Elsevier Saunders. pp 900-901. ISBN 0702027634.</ref>.
==Epidemiology and demographics==
 
==Differentiating Chronic bronchitis from other Diseases==
In clinical practice, COPD is defined by its characteristically low airflow on [[lung function test]]s.<ref name=Nathell>{{cite doi|10.1186/1465-9921-8-89}} [http://respiratory-research.com/content/8/1/89]</ref> In contrast to [[asthma]], this limitation is poorly reversible and usually gets progressively worse over time. It should be differentiated from certain conditions that have similar presentation for instance [[congestive heart failure]], [[chronic asthma]], [[bronchiectasis]], and [[bronchiolitis obliterans]].
 
==Epidemiology and Demographics==
COPD occurs in 34 out of 1000 greater than 65&nbsp;years old. In England, an estimated 842,100 of 50&nbsp;million people have a diagnosis of COPD; translating into approximately one person in 59 receiving a diagnosis of COPD at some point in their lives. In the most socioeconomically deprived parts of the country, one in 32 people were diagnosed with COPD, compared with one in 98 in the most affluent areas. In the United States, the [[prevalence]] of COPD is approximately 1 in 20 or 5%, totalling approximately 13.5&nbsp;million people in USA,<ref>[http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/c/copd/prevalence.htm wrongdiagnosis.com > Prevalence and Incidence of COPD] Retrieved on Mars 14, 2010</ref> or possibly approximately 25&nbsp;million people if undiagnosed cases are included.<ref>[http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/resources/docs/2009_ChartBook.pdf MORBIDITY & MORTALITY: 2009 CHART BOOK ON CARDIOVASCULAR, LUNG, AND BLOOD DISEASES] National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute</ref>
COPD occurs in 34 out of 1000 greater than 65&nbsp;years old. In England, an estimated 842,100 of 50&nbsp;million people have a diagnosis of COPD; translating into approximately one person in 59 receiving a diagnosis of COPD at some point in their lives. In the most socioeconomically deprived parts of the country, one in 32 people were diagnosed with COPD, compared with one in 98 in the most affluent areas. In the United States, the [[prevalence]] of COPD is approximately 1 in 20 or 5%, totalling approximately 13.5&nbsp;million people in USA,<ref>[http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/c/copd/prevalence.htm wrongdiagnosis.com > Prevalence and Incidence of COPD] Retrieved on Mars 14, 2010</ref> or possibly approximately 25&nbsp;million people if undiagnosed cases are included.<ref>[http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/resources/docs/2009_ChartBook.pdf MORBIDITY & MORTALITY: 2009 CHART BOOK ON CARDIOVASCULAR, LUNG, AND BLOOD DISEASES] National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute</ref>
==Risk factors==
==Risk Factors==
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is a group of [[disease|diseases]] characterized by the pathological limitation of airflow in the [[airway]] that is not fully reversible. A full comprehensive diagnosis is needed to eliminate related conditions and isolate the influence of lifestyle and behavior risk factors on condition outcome. Some common risk factors are cigarette smoking, occupational pollutants, air pollution and genetics. Other risk factors are increasing age, male gender, allergy, repeated airway infection.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is a group of [[disease|diseases]] characterized by the pathological limitation of airflow in the [[airway]] that is not fully reversible. A full comprehensive diagnosis is needed to eliminate related conditions and isolate the influence of lifestyle and behavior risk factors on condition outcome. Some common risk factors are cigarette smoking, occupational pollutants, air pollution and genetics. Other risk factors are increasing age, male gender, allergy, repeated airway infection.
==Differential diagnosis==
In clinical practice, COPD is defined by its characteristically low airflow on [[lung function test]]s.<ref name=Nathell>{{cite doi|10.1186/1465-9921-8-89}} [http://respiratory-research.com/content/8/1/89]</ref> In contrast to [[asthma]], this limitation is poorly reversible and usually gets progressively worse over time. It should be differentiated from certain conditions that have similar presentation for instance [[congestive heart failure]], [[chronic asthma]], [[bronchiectasis]], and [[bronchiolitis obliterans]].


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|2}}
[[Category:Inflammations]]
[[Category:Pulmonology]]
[[Category:General practice]]
[[Category:Emergency medicine]]
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Revision as of 17:13, 21 February 2013

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [2]

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Overview

Bronchitis is an inflammation of the bronchi (medium-size airways) in the lungs. Acute bronchitis is usually caused by viruses or bacteria and may last several days or weeks. Chronic bronchitis is not necessarily caused by infection and is generally part of a syndrome called chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD); it is defined clinically as a persistent cough that produces sputum (phlegm) and mucus, for at least three months in two consecutive years.

Historical Perspective

The terms chronic bronchitis and emphysema were formally defined at the CIBA guest symposium of physicians in 1959. COPD has probably always existed but has been called by different names in the past. Bonet described a condition of “voluminous lungs” in 1679. Matthew Baillie illustrated an emphysematous lung in 1789 and described the destructive character of the condition. The term COPD was first used by William Briscoe in 1965 and has gradually overtaken other terms to become established today as the preferred name for this disease.

Pathophysiology

Chronic bronchitis is defined in clinical terms as a cough with sputum production on most days for 3 months of a year, for 2 consecutive years.[1]. Chronic bronchitis is hallmarked by hyperplasia (increased number) and hypertrophy (increased size) of the goblet cells (mucous gland) of the airway, resulting in an increase in secretion of mucus which contributes to the airway obstruction. Microscopically there is infiltration of the airway walls with inflammatory cells, particularly neutrophils. Inflammation is followed by scarring and remodeling that thickens the walls resulting in narrowing of the small airway. Further progression leads to metaplasia (abnormal change in the tissue) and fibrosis (further thickening and scarring) of the lower airway. The consequence of these changes is a limitation of airflow.[2].

Differentiating Chronic bronchitis from other Diseases

In clinical practice, COPD is defined by its characteristically low airflow on lung function tests.[3] In contrast to asthma, this limitation is poorly reversible and usually gets progressively worse over time. It should be differentiated from certain conditions that have similar presentation for instance congestive heart failure, chronic asthma, bronchiectasis, and bronchiolitis obliterans.

Epidemiology and Demographics

COPD occurs in 34 out of 1000 greater than 65 years old. In England, an estimated 842,100 of 50 million people have a diagnosis of COPD; translating into approximately one person in 59 receiving a diagnosis of COPD at some point in their lives. In the most socioeconomically deprived parts of the country, one in 32 people were diagnosed with COPD, compared with one in 98 in the most affluent areas. In the United States, the prevalence of COPD is approximately 1 in 20 or 5%, totalling approximately 13.5 million people in USA,[4] or possibly approximately 25 million people if undiagnosed cases are included.[5]

Risk Factors

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is a group of diseases characterized by the pathological limitation of airflow in the airway that is not fully reversible. A full comprehensive diagnosis is needed to eliminate related conditions and isolate the influence of lifestyle and behavior risk factors on condition outcome. Some common risk factors are cigarette smoking, occupational pollutants, air pollution and genetics. Other risk factors are increasing age, male gender, allergy, repeated airway infection.

References

  1. Longmore M, Wilkinson I, Rajagopalan S (2005). Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine, 6ed. Oxford University Press. pp 188-189. ISBN 0-19-852558-3.
  2. Kumar P, Clark M (2005). Clinical Medicine, 6ed. Elsevier Saunders. pp 900-901. ISBN 0702027634.
  3. Template:Cite doi [1]
  4. wrongdiagnosis.com > Prevalence and Incidence of COPD Retrieved on Mars 14, 2010
  5. MORBIDITY & MORTALITY: 2009 CHART BOOK ON CARDIOVASCULAR, LUNG, AND BLOOD DISEASES National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute


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