A Guide for People with Chronic Aspergillosis, Asthma, and Other Long-Term Conditions
When you live with a long-term health condition like chronic aspergillosis (CPA), allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA), severe asthma, or immunosuppression, it can be hard to know when a flare-up is ājust part of the illnessā ā and when itās something more serious that needs emergency medical care.
This guide is designed to help you ā or someone you care for ā recognise the signs that mean itās time to stop waiting, stop asking for online advice, and get help immediately.
š§ A Special Note for People with Aspergillosis
People living with chronic aspergillosis often get used to symptoms like breathlessness, coughing, fatigue, or chest tightness. That makes it easy to miss or downplay serious changes ā especially if you’re reluctant to make another trip to A&E.
But there are times when acting fast is critical.
If you have CPA, ABPA, SAFS, or aspergillus bronchitis, you should go to A&E or call 999 immediately if you experience:
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š« Sudden or worsening breathlessness, especially if itās different from your usual
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šØ Breathing that doesnāt improve after using inhalers, nebulisers, or oxygen
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š New chest pain or tightness ā particularly if it spreads or worsens when breathing
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š”ļø A high fever, shaking chills, or flu-like symptoms
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𩸠Coughing up blood ā especially if it’s fresh or in large amounts
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š§ Feeling confused, drowsy, or faint
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ā Severe weakness, fatigue, or inability to stand or walk
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š Severe reaction to medications (e.g. antifungals, steroids, or biologics) ā rash, swelling, dizziness, jaundice
ā ļø Donāt Wait or Ask Online ā Act Fast When These Signs Appear
We completely understand why some people ā particularly those with severe asthma, CPA, or ABPA ā may be hesitant to go to A&E. You may have faced:
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Long waits
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Feeling dismissed or misunderstood
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Fear of hospital admission
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Exhaustion from too many medical appointments
These are real concerns, but when you’re struggling to breathe, disoriented, or deteriorating rapidly, itās not the time to post in a support group or wait for reassurance. Itās time to act.
In life-threatening moments, what you need isnāt advice ā itās treatment.
No support group ā no matter how compassionate ā can replace oxygen, IV antibiotics, a steroid boost, or emergency care.
Please donāt delay. You are never wasting anyoneās time by seeking help when something feels wrong.
š„ Emergency Symptoms That Always Need 999 or A&E
Whether you have a long-term condition or not, there are symptoms that require immediate action:
š« Breathing Problems
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Severe breathlessness, even at rest
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Struggling to speak or complete sentences
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Gasping, wheezing, choking
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Blue or grey lips, face, or fingertips
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No response to inhalers or nebulisers
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Sudden onset shortness of breath
ā¤ļø Chest Pain or Heart Symptoms
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Crushing or heavy chest pain
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Pain radiating to jaw, neck, arms, or back
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Palpitations + fainting, dizziness, or breathlessness
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Fast or irregular heartbeat
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Suspected heart attack or angina
š§ Neurological Emergencies
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Sudden weakness or numbness (especially on one side)
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Slurred speech, facial droop, or confusion
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Seizures or fits (especially if new or lasting >5 minutes)
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Sudden, severe headache
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Loss of consciousness or collapse
š”ļø Infection / Sepsis Signs
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High fever with chills or rigors
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Very fast breathing or heartbeat
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Cold, mottled, clammy skin
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Feeling very drowsy, confused, or unable to stay awake
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Not passing urine or drinking
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Feeling like something is seriously wrong
𩸠Bleeding or Trauma
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Heavy bleeding that doesnāt stop
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Major burns or deep wounds
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Suspected broken bones
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Head, neck, or spinal injury
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Bleeding from eyes, genitals, or rectum
š Medication-Related Emergencies
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Anaphylaxis: swelling, rash, shortness of breath, collapse
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Adrenal crisis (especially in those on long-term steroids): vomiting, confusion, weakness, fainting
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Severe side effects to antifungals or biologics: dizziness, liver pain, rash, yellowing skin
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Sudden change in behaviour or mental state after a new medication
š§ Not Sure? Here’s What to Do
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If youāre in doubt, but worried: Call NHS 111
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If symptoms are severe, worsening, or causing distress: Call 999 or go to A&E
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If youāre alone, unwell, and unsure ā you are safer being checked
š Summary: When to Get Help Immediately
| Symptom Area | Emergency Signs |
|---|---|
| Aspergillosis-specific | Sudden breathlessness, new chest pain, coughing blood, fever, severe weakness, confusion |
| Breathing | Gasping, cyanosis, wheezing unrelieved by inhalers |
| Heart | Chest pain, palpitations with collapse, irregular pulse |
| Neurological | Stroke signs, seizures, new confusion, severe headache |
| Infection/Sepsis | High fever + confusion or fast breathing, cold mottled skin |
| Trauma/Bleeding | Uncontrolled bleeding, deep wounds, broken bones, burns |
| Medication-related | Anaphylaxis, adrenal crisis, severe side effects, sudden mental health change |
š¬ Final Word
If you’re experiencing any of these symptoms, this is not the time to post in a support group or wait to see how things go.
Please donāt delay ā even if youāve had difficult A&E experiences in the past. The risk of waiting is far greater than the discomfort of being seen.
You are never wasting anyoneās time by protecting your health or saving your life.
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