DISEASES AND CONDITIONS

What Is Emphysema?

August 21, 2018

What Is Emphysema?

Emphysema is a lung disease that limits the movement of air in and out of your lungs. This makes breathing harder. It's most often caused by heavy, long-term cigarette smoking. Emphysema is one of a group of conditions called chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

Healthy lungs

  • Inside the lungs are branching airways made of stretchy tissue. Each airway is wrapped with bands of muscle that help keep it open. Air travels in and out of the lungs through these airways.

  • The tubes branch into smaller passages called bronchioles. These end in clusters of balloon-like sacs called alveoli.

  • Blood vessels surrounding the alveoli move oxygen into the blood. At the same time, the alveoli remove carbon dioxide from the blood. The carbon dioxide is then exhaled.

When you have emphysema

  • Airways become damaged. When the lung tissue loses its stretchiness, the surrounding airways collapse more easily and trap air in the lungs. 

  • Damaged airways collapse when you exhale, causing air to get trapped in the alveoli. This trapped air makes breathing harder.

  • Over time, the air sacs lose their clustered shape and don't work well. And less oxygen enters the blood.

  • The air sacs get larger. This makes it even harder for the lungs to move air in and out.

Updated:  

August 21, 2018

Reviewed By:  

Alan J Blaivas DO,Wanda Taylor RN PhD,Daphne Pierce-Smith RN MSN CCRC