What Causes Breathlessness During Rigorous Activity For An Obese Person?
Information
Detailed Answer:
Hello Rocky,
I don't know what your BMI or height and weight are, but being overweight can definitely affect our exercise tolerance.
It would be hard to put a finger on why this occurs at times and less or not at all at other times without a more thorough history. It may have to do with the quality of your sleep on certain days, how much exertion you expended for other things prior to climbing the stairs, what and how much you ate.
The blocked or stuffy nose is most likely nasal mucosal swelling and this can be due to allergies but more likely, given that it happens after exertion, is due to vasomotor rhinitis. Vasomotor rhinitis can cause nasal inflammation due to non-allergic things such as breathing dry or cold air, eating hot soup, irritants such as laundry detergent and dryer sheet fragrances, etc. Perhaps when you are walking up the stairs you are breathing harder, getting more dry air through your nasal passages and they are swelling in response.
I hope this provides you with the information you are looking for. Please let me know if I can provide further information or clarification.
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I just want to make sure it's not exercise induced asthma. btw I had xray which showed tuberinate hypertrophy regarding nose block
Thoughts on this
Detailed Answer:
Exercise induced asthma will cause reactivity of the bronchi (airway into the lungs), and can cause shortness of breath, wheezing, and coughing.
Nebivolol is a beta-1 receptor blocker. Beta blockers can cause bronchospasm (tightening of the bronchi). Beta 2 blockers are more of a risk for that, with beta 1 being more specific to cardiac effects. That's because the cardiovascular system have more beta 1 receptors and the bronchi have more beta 2. But, both have some of the other receptors. So beta 1 blockers can indeed cause some bronchospasm.
I don't expect that this medication would cause ongoing hypertrophy of the turbinates. It can cause dilation of the blood vessels and perhaps that might cause some temporary nasal swelling or drainage.
The way to find out if you have exercise induced asthma, which might be made worse with the Bystolic (nebivolol) would be to get a spirometry breathing test. So there is possibility for this to be going on.
Thoughts on this.
Detailed Answer:
Spirometry can diagnose exercise induced asthma if it is paired with either an exercise challenge. This can be done with actual exercise or a chemical challenge with methacholine, mannitol, or EVH (carbon dioxide, oxygen and nitrogen dry air challenge).
Some people with asthma just get short of breath while others only cough. Not all wheeze. I have asthma but no longer wheezing.
The shortness of breath could be from weight but could also be from asthma. If you don't want to go through the whole spirometry testing, you can take with your doctor about using a metered dose beta agonist inhaler to see if it reverses the problem. Asthma is "reversible airway disease" and a bronchodilator can help to show if that is what is going on. The problem with using a standard bronchodilator such as albuterol is that it can increase your heart rate! A more expensive version called levaluberol (Xopenex) has less beta 1 stimulation so less effect on the heart. But I recommend clearing this with the doctor who prescribes your heart medication before trying this.