How long can you live with chronic lung obstruction?

Chronic lung obstruction, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), if treated scientifically and with aggressive interventions, many patients progress slowly and can survive for as long as 10 to 20 years, or even longer.
COPD is one of the most highly prevalent lung diseases, and its underlying causes include genetics, age and gender, bronchial asthma and airway hyperresponsiveness disorders, as well as predisposing factors such as smoking and air pollution.
If COPD is actively controlled, some patients have effective symptomatic relief and can survive with the disease for 10 to 20 years or even longer, mainly relying on good lifestyle habits and disease management.
If you do not actively cooperate with the treatment and allow it to develop, it can be complicated by respiratory failure, heart failure and systemic multi-organ failure in the later stage, and will soon become life-threatening.
Therefore, the most important thing is to actively intervene in the early stage of symptoms, remove the causative factors, and carry out active rehabilitation, medication, oxygen therapy and so on, in order to strive for the best therapeutic effect.