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Dyspnea
(redirected from exertional dyspnea)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
dyspnea [′dis·nē·ə]
(medicine)
Difficult or labored breathing.

Dyspnea 

disruption of the rate and depth of respiration, accompanied by the sensation of shortness of breath.

Cardiac patients experience dyspnea both while physically exerting themselves and while subsequently resting in the horizontal position. Their condition is complicated by orthopnea, the inability to breathe except in a sitting position. In patients with cardiac diseases, attacks of severe dyspnea, which usually occur at night, are a symptom of cardiac asthma. In such cases, the dyspnea is inspiratory; that is, the patient finds it difficult to inhale. Expiratory dyspnea, difficulty in exhaling, arises when the lumina of the small bronchi and bronchioles are narrowed, as in bronchial asthma. It also arises when the elasticity of the lung tissue is lost, as in chronic emphysema of the lungs. Cerebral dyspnea is a result of direct irritation of the cerebral respiratory center by such abnormalities as tumors and hemorrhages.



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We presented that a case with exertional dyspnea due to external compression on the trachea due to a right sided arcus aorta anomaly.
The patient typically presents with exertional dyspnea and fatigue due to the combination of a decreased cardiac output and an increase in left atrial pressure secondary to the backflow across the mitral valve.
 
 
 
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