What Causes Coughing Up Blood?
Coughing up blood (hemoptysis) can be caused by a number of conditions, some of which are serious. See a doctor if you cough up blood to determine the underlying cause.
Call 911 and get to a hospital’s emergency department if you cough up blood and:
- You had trauma or injury to the chest
- More than a one teaspoon of blood is coughed up
- Blood is also in the urine or stool
- If you are taking blood thinning medications (anticoagulants)
- It is accompanied by chest pain, fever, dizziness, lightheadedness, or shortness of breath
Causes of coughing up blood that are non-life-threatening include:
- Airway diseases
- Bronchitis and bronchiectasis
- Bronchial neoplasm (cancer)
- Foreign bodies in the airways
- Broncholiths (calcified lymph node)
- Airway infections
- Fistulas
- Dieulafoy lesion
- Pulmonary parenchymal diseases
- Infection, such as tuberculosis, mycetoma, lung abscess, and necrotizing pneumonia
- Rheumatic and immune disorders, such as anti-glomerular basement membrane (i.e., Goodpasture) syndrome, lupus pneumonitis/vasculitis, granulomatosis with polyangiitis, microscopic polyangiitis, primary antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, Behçet syndrome, pulmonary capillaritis, and idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis
- Genetic disorders of connective tissue, such as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
- Catamenial hemoptysis
- Pulmonary vascular disorders
- Elevated pulmonary capillary pressure
- Pulmonary arteriovenous malformation (PAVM)
- Pulmonary or bronchial artery aneurysms, such as Hughes-Stovin syndrome, which may be a type of Behçet syndrome
- Pulmonary artery pseudoaneurysms
- Pulmonary embolism (thrombotic, fat, septic)
- Trauma and bleeding disorders
- Bleeding disorders, such as, thrombocytopenia, disseminated intravascular anticoagulation, platelet dysfunction syndromes, and von Willebrand disease, and use of anticoagulant or antiplatelet medications
- Airway or parenchymal trauma
- Iatrogenic injury
- Miscellaneous causes
- Drugs and toxins: habitual smokers of free-base cocaine ("crack"), levamisole-contaminated cocaine
- Bevacizumab treatment
- Nitrogen dioxide exposure in indoor ice arenas
- E-cigarette or vaping product use associated lung injury (EVALI)
- Other drugs: riociguat, hydralazine, and argemone alkaloid-contaminated cooking oil
- Idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis
- Fibrosing mediastinitis
- Pulmonary amyloid
Common causes of coughing up blood that can be life-threatening include:
- Bronchiectasis
- Tuberculosis
- Fungal infections, such as aspergilloma and invasive parenchymal fungal infections
- Bronchogenic cancer
Uncommon causes of coughing up blood that can be life-threatening include:
- Other lung infections such as bacterial lung abscess and/or necrotizing pneumonia
- Immunologic lung diseases, such as anti-glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM; Goodpasture) disease, granulomatosis with polyangiitis, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis, primary antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, Behçet syndrome, and microscopic polyangiitis
- Chemotherapy and bone marrow transplantation
- Pulmonary vascular diseases
- Pulmonary arteriovenous malformations (PAVMs)
- Mitral stenosis
- Pulmonary embolism
- Congenital heart disease or severe pulmonary hypertension
- Acquired and iatrogenic trauma (trauma from a medical procedure)
- Posterior arterial nosebleeds
- Penetrating, rather than blunt, trauma
- Right heart catheterization (i.e., pulmonary artery catheterization)
- Medical interventions, including percutaneous or transbronchial lung biopsy, cryobiopsy, central vein venipuncture during pacemaker insertion, and ablative procedures for endobronchial masses.
- Fistulas, such as fistulas between the aorta and the airway
- Acute bronchitis
From
Lung Disease/COPD Resources
References