Breathing difficulties - first aid
Definition:
Breathing difficulties can be described in
several different ways. If you are having
trouble breathing, you may feel "winded," short
of breath, unable to take a deep breath, "air
hunger" (you are not getting enough air), or
like you are gasping for air.1
Alternative Names:
Difficulty breathing - first aid; Dyspnea -
first aid; Shortness of breath - first aid
Considerations:
If you are having difficulty breathing, it is
almost always a medical emergency (other than
feeling slightly winded from normal activity
like exercise or climbing a hill).
Causes:
Difficulty breathing has many potential causes.
Some of the most common are:
- Sudden illness or infections like
pneumonia,
acute bronchitis,
whooping cough,
croup, or epiglottitis (inflammation
of the epiglottis -- the flap that closes the
windpipe when you swallow)
- Ongoing medical problems like
heart disease,
asthma,
emphysema,
chronic bronchitis,
or
heart failure
(which causes shortness of breath because fluid
backs up into the lungs)
- Heart attack
- Injury to the neck, chest wall, or lungs
- Collapsed lung,
which can happen if you have emphysema or
asthma, but may also happen spontaneously in
young, healthy people
- High altitudes, which can be a problem even in
young people
- Cigarette smoking or breathing secondhand smoke
- Pulmonary embolism,
or a blood clot in the lung, which can cause
very abrupt and severe difficulty breathing
- Life-threatening allergic reaction
Symptoms:
The following symptoms are often associated with
difficulty breathing:
- Gurgling,
wheezing,
or whistling sounds
- Using chest and neck muscles to breathe
- Bluish lips, fingers, and fingernails
- Cough
(if the person also has phlegm/sputum, this may
be pneumonia; a barking cough in a child is
croup)
- Chest pain (could be a heart attack or injury;
sharp chest pain could be pulmonary embolism or
collapsed lung)
- Chest moving in an unusual way as the person
breathes (may indicate an airway or chest
injury)
- Confusion,
light-headedness,
weakness,
or sleepiness
- Fever
First Aid:
- Call your local emergency number (such as 911)
immediately.
-Check the person's airway, breathing, and
circulation. If necessary, begin rescue
breathing,
CPR,
and first aid for
bleeding.
- Loosen any tight clothing.
- Help the person use any prescribed medication
(such as an asthma inhaler or home oxygen).
- Continue to monitor the person's breathing and
circulation until medical help arrives. DO NOT
assume that the person's condition is improving
if you can no longer hear wheezing.
- If there are open wounds in the neck or chest,
they must be closed immediately, especially if
air bubbles appear in the wound. Bandage such
wounds at once.
- A "sucking" chest wound allows air to enter the
person's chest cavity with each breath. This can
cause a
collapsed lung.
Bandage the wound with plastic wrap, a plastic
bag, or gauze pads covered with petroleum jelly,
sealing it except for one corner. This allows
trapped air to escape from the chest, but
prevents air from entering the chest through the
wound.
Do Not:
- DO NOT give the person any foods or drinks.
- DO NOT move the person if there has been a
chest or airway injury, unless it is absolutely
necessary.
- DO NOT place a pillow under the person's head
if he or she is lying down. This can close the
airway.
- DO NOT wait to see if the person's condition
improves before getting medical help. Get help
immediately.
Call immediately for emergency medical
assistance if:
Call your local emergency number (such as 911)
if you or someone else
has labored breathing,
especially if accompanied by:
- Chest pain
- Sweating
- Nausea or vomiting
- Dizziness or lightheadedness
- Blue lips, fingers, or fingernails
- Inability to speak
- High pitched or wheezing sounds
- Facial, tongue, or throat swelling
- Hives
- Rapid or irregular heart beat
- Coughing up large amounts of blood
- Excessive drooling
Call your doctor right away if:
- Your shortness of breath is brought on by
coughing, especially productive coughing.
- Your child's cough has a barking sound.
- You have a fever, green or yellow phlegm, night
sweats, weight loss, loss of appetite, or
swelling in your legs.
You are coughing up small amounts of blood.
Prevention:
- Wear a medical alert tag if you have a
pre-existing breathing condition, such as
asthma.
- If you have a history of severe allergic
reactions, carry an epinephrine pen and wear a
medical alert tag. Your doctor will teach you
how to use the epi pen.
- If you have asthma or allergies, eliminate
household allergy triggers like dust mites and mold.
- Don't smoke and keep away from secondhand
smoke. Don't allow smoking in your home.
- If you have asthma, use a peak flow meter every
day or two. Your doctor will teach you how to
use this device, which can give an early warning
that an asthma attack is coming.
- Make sure your child obtains the pertussis
(whooping cough) vaccine.
- When traveling by airplane, get up and walk
around once in awhile to avoid forming blood
clots in your legs. Clots can break off and
lodge in your lungs. If traveling by car, stop
and walk around regularly.
- Lose weight. You are more likely to feel winded
if you are overweight. You
are also at greater
risk for heart disease and heart attack.