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At first glance, this seems like it'd have nothing to do with your lungs. But this can be a sign you have deep vein thrombosis, a blood clot in your leg, says Andrea McKee, MD, Chairman of Radiation Oncology at the Lahey Hospital & Medical Center (LHMC) Sophia Gordon Cancer Center in Burlington, Massachusetts. The risk here is that it can break off and get into your lung, a condition called a pulmonary embolism. A clot in your lung can block blood flow and cause serious damage. Other clues include shortness of breath, problems breathing, and chest pain. (But you may also have no lung symptoms.) It's important to get help as soon as you can: 30 percent of patients with this condition die, reports the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
You're short of breath
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You've started taking the elevator instead of the stairs
If you feel like your breathing is labored during normal activities and you've developed a chronic cough (without first having a cold) or have shortness of breath, your doctor may test for COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease). It is the third leading cause of death in the U.S., according to the American Lung Association. And while 11 million people have been diagnosed, many more people have no idea they have it—particularly women. Plus, many people think that shortness of breath walking across a parking lot simply happens as you age, but this isn't a normal toll of getting older.
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You have no symptoms at all
Lung cancer is something you never want to hear. But the scary news is that early stage lung cancer rarely comes with symptoms, says Dr. McKee. "We usually find stage one lung cancer by accident," she says. That may be because a patient needed a chest or spine X-ray for something entirely different, and the cancer was spotted at that time. By the time other symptoms crop up—back pain, headaches, fatigue—that's often a sign it's spread to other parts of the body. That's why if you're at a high-risk for lung cancer (you're over 55 and have a 30-year history of smoking), you should be screened with a low-dose CT scan. (See if you're a candidate at the American Lung Association's website.) "That's nine million people," she says.
You cough up blood
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How to keep your lungs healthy
"The most important thing you can do is avoid tobacco use," says Dr. McKee. "People need to understand that the lungs are filters that bring oxygen to the rest of your body and help clear out carcinogens and other unhealthy debris," she adds. And you don't want to clog those filters. "You only get one set," she says. Treat them well.
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