Patients with bipulmonary emphysema alveoli are not serious if they have no obvious symptoms and can be observed; if they have corresponding symptoms, they are more serious and need timely treatment.
Pulmonary blisters are a collective term for air-containing saccular cavities in the lung tissue with a diameter greater than 1 cm, formed because of elevated pressure in the alveolar cavities, resulting in the rupture of the alveolar walls and their fusion with each other. Pulmonary blisters can be secondary to some bronchial pathologies, such as pneumonia, tuberculosis or emphysema.
As an irreversible disease, there is no effective treatment. For lung herpes found during physical examination, if there are no symptoms such as chest tightness, chest pain, hemoptysis, coughing up sputum, etc., it is usually not serious and does not need special treatment.
If there is symptomatic pulmonary herpes, it is more serious, which usually indicates that there is a combination of infection, or complications, such as spontaneous pneumothorax, etc., and needs active treatment, and when combined with infection, it needs anti-infective treatment, and if necessary, surgical treatment.
If you feel unwell, please consult a doctor promptly. Patients should quit smoking, avoid inhaling irritating gases, keep warm and avoid repeated colds.