What Is Dyspnea?
Dyspnea is the medical term for shortness of breath or difficulty breathing.
What Are Symptoms of Dyspnea?
Dyspnea is shortness of breath or difficulty breathing and is a symptom of other medical conditions. Dyspnea may be acute (sudden dyspnea) or chronic (long-term dyspnea).
When a person feels short of breath, other symptoms may include:
- Inability to breathe deeply
- Sense you cannot inhale deeply
- Tightness in the chest
- Increased effort to breathe
- “Air hunger”
- Sensation of rapid, shallow breathing
- Sense of heavy breathing
- Feeling of suffocation
Additional symptoms that may accompany dyspnea, depending on the cause, include:
- Cough
- Sputum production
- Nasal congestion
- Chest pain
- Swelling of extremities
- Raynaud’s phenomenon (poor circulation to the extremities)
- Joint swelling
- Muscle weakness
What Causes Dyspnea?
There are numerous causes for dyspnea.
The most common causes of chronic dyspnea include:
- Asthma
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis
- Interstitial lung disease
- Heart dysfunction
- Obesity/deconditioning due to lack of physical activity
Acute dyspnea that comes on over minutes to hours is usually due to a limited number of conditions, including:
- Cardiovascular causes
- Reduced blood flow in cardiac arteries (acute myocardial ischemia)
- Heart failure
- Cardiac tamponade
- Acute coronary syndrome (ACS)
- High output failure
- Cardiomyopathy
- Arrhythmia
- Valvular dysfunction
Respiratory causes
- Bronchospasm
- Blood clot in the lung (pulmonary embolism, or PE)
- Pneumothorax
- Lung infection such as bronchitis, pneumonia
- Upper airway obstruction such as aspiration, severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis), foreign objects lodged in the upper airways
- Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
- Hemorrhage
- Hyperventilation
Neurologic causes
- Stroke
- Neuromuscular disease
Toxic/metabolic causes
- Toxic ingestion
- Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Sepsis
- Anemia
- Carbon monoxide poisoning
- Salicylate poisoning
- Organophosphate poisoning
- Acute chest syndrome
Other causes
- Angioedema
- Neck trauma
- Rib fractures
- Flail chest
- Anxiety
- Pneumomediastinum
- Lung tumor
- Pleural effusion
- Intra-abdominal process
- Ascites
- Pregnancy
How Is Dyspnea Diagnosed?
Diagnosis of dyspnea usually begins with a history, if the patient is able to speak, and a physical examination. In the physical exam, the doctor will check
- Respiratory rate
- Pulse oximetry
- Abnormal breath sounds such as stridor, wheezing, crackles
- Cardiovascular signs such as abnormal heart rhythm, heart murmur, muffled or distant heart sounds, and other signs
- Blood pressure drops when inhaling (pulsus paradoxus)
- Skin for discoloration that may show signs of low blood oxygen (hypoxia) or poor blood flow, signs of an allergic reaction, or evidence of trauma
- Swelling of extremities
Tests that may be indicated to help diagnose the cause of acute dyspnea include:
- Chest X-ray
- Ultrasound
- Electrocardiogram (ECG)
- Cardiac biomarkers
- Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP)
- D-dimer
- Arterial and venous blood gas
- Carbon dioxide monitoring
- Chest computerized tomography scan (CT)
- Pulmonary ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) scan
- Multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) scan of the chest
- Peak flow and pulmonary function tests (PFTs)
- Negative inspiratory force (NIF)
Tests for chronic dyspnea depend on the suspected cause and may include:
- Blood tests
- Complete blood count
- Glucose, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, electrolytes
- Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH)
- Spirometry pre and post inhaled bronchodilator OR full pulmonary function tests (PFTs)
- Pulse oximetry during ambulation at a normal pace over approximately 200 meters and/or up two to three flights of stairs
- Chest X-ray
- Electrocardiogram (ECG)
- Plasma BNP or NT-pro BNP
What Is the Treatment for Dyspnea?
Treatment for acute severe dyspnea in an emergency setting usually includes
- Oxygen
- Determining if the patient needs emergency airway management and ventilatory support
- Establishing the most likely causes of the dyspnea and initiating treatment
Treatment for chronic dyspnea varies widely depending on the cause. For example
- If chronic dyspnea is caused by asthma, that may be treated with medications such as bronchodilators or inhaled steroids
- If chronic dyspnea is caused by a blood clot (pulmonary embolism), you may need blood thinners
- If chronic dyspnea is caused by fluid in the lungs, that fluid may need to be drained
What Are Complications of Dyspnea?
Complications of dyspnea include:
- Low blood oxygen (hypoxia)
- Loss of consciousness
- Cognitive impairment
How Do You Prevent Dyspnea?
Some causes of dyspnea may be prevented, and in doing so, this will prevent dyspnea from developing or worsening.
- Don’t smoke or quit smoking
- Lose weight and maintain a healthy weight
- Avoid allergens
- Practice stress reduction techniques