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Symptoms » Rapid breathing » Diagnosis Checklist
 
Dr. Huntley's

DIAGNOSIS CHECKLIST
for Rapid breathing

Questions Your Doctor May Ask - and Why!

During a consultation, your doctor will use various techniques in his assesment of the symptom: Rapid breathing. These may include a physical examination or other medical tests. Your doctor may ask several questions when assessing your condition. It is important to remember that your consultation is a two-way process and any extra information you can share with your doctor may help them with their diagnosis.

Some of the questions your doctor may ask are listed below:

  1. How long have you had the rapid breathing?

    Why: to determine if acute or chronic.

  2. Was the onset sudden or gradual?

    Why: if sudden consider adult respiratory distress syndrome, pulmonary embolism, pneumothorax, lung collapse or panic attack. If gradual onset, consider chronic diseases such as congestive cardiac failure, emphysema and fibrosis.

  3. What makes the rapid breathing worse?

    Why: e.g. exertion, laying flat in bed, anxiety, fears.

  4. Is there a simple, everyday explanation for rapid breathing?

    Why: e.g. exercise, exertion, poor physical condition (unfit), stress.

  5. Recent history of bleeding?

    Why: e.g. heavy periods with clots, vomiting blood, bloody stools, rectal bleeding - may suggest anemia as cause for the rapid breathing.

  6. Current stressors?

    Why: e.g. interpersonal relationships, physical health, occupational stressors or financial worries - anxiety and panic states are usually in some understandable relationship to stressful life events. Anxiety and panic states may cause rapid breathing.

  7. Past Medical history?

    Why: previous respiratory illness (e.g. pneumonia, tuberculosis, chronic bronchitis); previous heart problems; HIV infection ( at high risk for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia); previous high blood pressure, ischemic heart disease, heart attack, heart valve disease, deep venous thrombosis or Rheumatic fever.

  8. Past psychiatric history?

    Why: e.g. panic attacks, anxiety.

  9. Medications?

    Why: many different medications can produce lung problems and rapid breathing (e.g. pulmonary embolism from oral contraceptive pill); fibrotic lung diseases from cytotoxic agents such as methotrexate, cyclophosphamide and bleomycin; bronchospasm from beta-blockers or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications.

  10. Cigarette smoking?

    Why: number of packets per day and number of years you have smoked. Smoking is a major risk cause of lung cancer, chronic bronchitis and emphysema. Passive smoking exposure is also regarded as a significant risk.

  11. Drug taking history?

    Why: cocaine and amphetamine intoxication can cause rapid breathing.

  12. Alcohol history?

    Why: The drinking of large amounts of alcohol in binges can sometimes result in aspiration pneumonia. Alcoholics are also prone to develop pneumococcal or Klebsiella pneumonia.

  13. Occupational history?

    Why: e.g. exposure to dusts in mining industries and factories (such as asbestos, coal, silica, iron oxide, tin oxide, cotton, beryllium, titanium oxide, silver, nitrogen dioxide, anhydrides); exposure to animals (e.g. Q fever or psittacosis); exposure to moldy hay, humidifiers or air conditioners may result in allergic alveolitis.

  14. Family history?

    Why: asthma, cystic fibrosis, emphysema, alpha-1-anti-typsin deficiency, tuberculosis, heart attacks, anxiety, panic disorder, heart attacks.

Questions your doctor may ask about related symptoms:

Sometimes, other symptoms may be present and may help your doctor analyse your condition. These may include:

  1. Cough?
  2. Sputum

    Why: color and quantity? - e.g. large volume pus-like may suggest bronchiectasis or pneumonia; foul smelling dark colored suggests lung abscess; pink frothy secretions may due to left ventricular heart failure; blood in sputum can be a serious sign of lung disease and must always be investigated.

  3. Audible wheeze?

    Why: may suggest asthma, chronic bronchitis, emphysema, airways obstruction (by a foreign body or tumor) or left ventricular heart failure.

  4. Chest pain?

    Why: may be due to lung or heart disease.

  5. Fever?

    Why: e.g. fever at night may suggest tuberculosis, pneumonia of mesothelioma ( tumor of lung lining due to asbestos exposure).

  6. Orthopnea (breathlessness lying down flat)?

    Why: suggests left ventricular heart failure.

  7. Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea (inappropriate severe breathlessness causing waking from sleep)?

    Why: suggests left ventricular failure.

  8. Stridor (a rasping noise heard loudest on inspiration)?

    Why: indicates obstruction of the larynx, trachea or large airways by a foreign body, a tumor or infection such as epiglottitis.

  9. Ankle swelling?

    Why: may suggest heart failure.

  10. Palpitations of the heart?

    Why: may indicate that heart arrhythmia may be the cause of rapid breathing.

  11. Fever and pus-like sputum?

    Why: suggests pneumonia.

  12. Chest pain with blood in sputum?

    Why: need to rule out pulmonary embolism.

  13. Panic attacks?

    Why: recurrent panic attacks occur in Panic disorder and may cause sudden, unexpected, short-lived episodes of intense anxiety.

  14. Symptoms of anxiety?

    Why: e.g. nervousness, shakiness, tremor, restlessness, irritability, insomnia, poor concentration, heart palpitations, racing heart, sweating, dizziness, diarrhea, lump in throat and frequency of urination.

  15. Phobias?

    Why: persistent, irrational fear with a compelling desire to avoid the object or situation occurs in Phobia disorders and may be confused with generalized anxiety disorder or be associated with anxiety.


 » Next page: Types of Rapid breathing

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