How your doctor can help with breathlessness

Your doctor needs to find the cause of your breathlessness to find the best treatment for you.

They ask lots of questions about your health and your breathing problems. They might give you a questionnaire to help you describe how breathless you feel. This can feel like a lot to deal with if you are very breathless and tired. If you find it hard to answer the questions your family and friends might be able to help. 

Your doctor will also examine you. This might include:

  • examining your chest and tummy area (abdomen) 
  • asking you to blow into a tube to measure how much air you can breathe in and blow out (peak flow)
  • taking your blood pressure and pulse 
  • measuring how well oxygen is travelling around the body (oxygen saturation level)

Tests 

To get more information about your breathlessness, you might have one or more of the following tests:

  • a chest x-ray
  • CT scan
  • lung function tests
  • blood tests
  • ultrasound scan of the chest

Finding the right treatment

Your treatment depends on what is causing your breathlessness. There may be several causes. It might be possible to treat some of the causes and still not fully relieve the breathlessness. 

Some treatments may have side effects. Ask your doctor about the risks and benefits of different treatments.

Medicines

Your doctor might suggest medicines to help your breathing. 

Complementary therapies

Your doctor or nurse might suggest relaxation classes, massage or acupuncture to help your breathlessness.

Many hospitals now run breathlessness clinics and these treatments may be available there. 

If you are interested in trying a particular complementary therapy, talk to your nurse. If it is not available at your hospital or clinic, there may be a local cancer support group that offers this type of service. Or they can put you in touch with local practitioners.

Referral to a breathlessness clinic

Some hospitals have set up specialist breathlessness clinics. It won’t just be people with cancer who go to these clinics. There will be people with chronic lung disease there too.

The clinics are usually run by specialist nurses, occupational therapists, and physiotherapists. They can help you learn techniques to manage your breathlessness. The clinics often run over a few weeks, for example, it might be a course that runs between 6 to 8 weeks. 

You can learn better breathing techniques, relaxation, and how to pace yourself. 

Last reviewed: 
27 Jun 2023
Next review due: 
27 Jun 2026

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