Pulmonary alveoli are clinically known as pulmonary alveoli, which are benign lesions, and there are no clinical studies related to how many years patients with pulmonary alveoli can live. Alveoli generally do not affect the patient’s life expectancy, and the impact on the body is related to the patient’s disease condition, physical fitness and clinical treatment.
Pulmonary blisters are caused by a variety of reasons to increase the pressure in the alveolar cavity, the alveolar wall rupture, fused with each other, forming an air-containing cavity with a diameter of more than 1cm in the lung tissue. Lung maculopapulars are usually secondary to inflammatory lesions in the small bronchioles, such as pneumonia, tuberculosis or emphysema, and some lung maculopapulars are also caused by congenital genetic anomalies.
Asymptomatic pulmonary pustules found on examination usually do not require treatment. Patients should quit smoking and take care not to cough excessively hard or deliberately hold their breath, which usually will not cause the lung herpes to rupture and will not affect the patient’s life expectancy.
If the pulmonary blisters are large, it is easy to complicate pneumothorax, hemopneumothorax secondary infection, then need timely surgical treatment. If the patient is old, there may be infection after the formation of pneumothorax, aggravating the condition and endangering the patient’s life.
It is recommended that patients relax and go to the hospital in time for treatment to avoid delaying the condition.