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Does respiratory infection lead to bronchitis and COPD?

This Premium Q&A, reviewed and published, features a real conversation between an iCliniq user and a physician.

Patient's Query

Hello doctor,

I am a 47-year-old male and am a patient with allergic asthma. I have been using an Aerocort inhaler for the last 10 to 15 years, and more or less, there has not been any serious issue. A day before yesterday, I was on an official trip, checked in at a hotel the previous night, and took a chilled beer. After some time, I got a whizzing sound from my chest or respiratory tract. My situation worsened slightly, and I started coughing out mucous sputum. The sputum was pink and red. This made me very uncomfortable for another 30 to 45 min or an hour or so. I again used an Aerocort inhaler to control my breath and revert to normal. The coughing every time and more than 15 to 20 times, I spitted out with reddish or tinge red sputum. Since then, I was on an official trip; I controlled my breath and continued going out and doing some agricultural field research jobs, which I was supposed to do. Please help and advise suitable onward investigation and confirmation of my being well.

Hello,

Welcome to icliniq.com.

To better understand your condition and provide the right guidance, I need a few more details:

  1. Did your wheezing start after visiting a specific agricultural field or coming into contact with a particular plant?
  2. Did you eat anything unusual, like nuts or shellfish?
  3. Do you know what you're allergic to? Have you ever had allergy testing or a skin prick test?
  4. Was there any pus in your sputum?
  5. Did you have a fever, sore throat, chest pain, or a history of COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)?
  6. Do you smoke?

Based on your symptoms, I recommend the following tests at this point:

  1. Sputum examination.
  2. Sputum culture and sensitivity.
  3. Complete blood count (CBC).
  4. Serum IgE (immunoglobulin E) levels.
  5. Chest X-ray.
  6. If your IgE levels are elevated, you may need a skin prick test or a blood test like ImmunoCAP to help identify specific allergens.

Please feel free to reach out with any more questions.

Thank you.

Medically reviewed byiCliniq medical review team

Published At February 14, 2023
Reviewed AtMay 23, 2025

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