Clean inside those bagpipes — and trumpets and clarinets
Bagpipe lung
BAGpīp ləng n.
An inflammatory lung disease caused by regular inhalation of fungi living inside bagpipes.
In 2014, a 61-year-old man died after seven years of a mysterious illness that left him breathless, with a dry cough.
Doctors diagnosed him with hypersensitivity pneumonitis, a rare disease caused by breathing in particles that irritate lung tissues. It’s also known as bird fancier’s lung, humidifier lung and hot tub lung, among other names. But the patient had no known exposure to birds, nor to household molds that can trigger the disorder.
Two clues intrigued Jenny King, a physician at the University Hospital South Manchester in England: The patient played the bagpipes daily. And on a three-month trip to Australia, when he left his bagpipes at home, his symptoms disappeared.
King and colleagues found pink yeast, mold and plant fungi living in the instrument’s neck, the cap that fits over the reed and in air blown out of the bag. Inhaling the microbes every day could have sparked the patient’s disease, the team reported online August 22 in Thorax.
Bagpipe, trombone and saxophone players be warned: Musical instruments with moist interiors should be cleaned immediately after use, the authors suggest.