Chronic Cough/February 2010
It is imperative to rule out serious diseases & make specific
diagnoses in all cases of chronic cough
Cough means that
something is irritating the lungs, airways, voice box, esophagus, or back of the
throat. When cough is sudden in
onset and of short duration, it is usually caused by a recent illness such as
the common cold, pneumonia, bronchitis, or laryngitis, and the diagnosis is
usually obvious. However, when the
cough is of prolonged duration, the diagnoses may not be as obvious but the
causes may be a lot more serious.
Hence, it is imperative to rule out serious diseases and to make
specific diagnoses in all cases of chronic cough.
Chronic cough means
that someone has been coughing for several weeks without showing signs of
improvement, which is in contrast to the self-limited course of most new-onset
cough disorders mentioned above.
The causes of chronic cough may be divided into several broad clinical
categories:
Smoking is by far
the commonest cause of chronic cough.
Chronic inhalation of tobacco smoke irritates the airways, causing the
mucus glands to enlarge, become hyperactive, and produce large amounts of
sputum. This leads to the familiar
moist cough of smokers with daily sputum expectoration, a condition medically
known as chronic bronchitis.
Nonsmokers who are exposed to second-hand smoke may also develop a
similar condition. By definition,
anyone who expectorates sputum on most days of the week may be given the
diagnosis of chronic bronchitis.
Moreover, besides chronic
bronchitis, primary or secondary smoke inhalation may also cause airway spasm,
a condition similar to asthma, which can also cause chronic cough but with
little or no sputum expectoration.
Although important, chest x-rays are not usually useful except in ruling
out other serious causes of chronic cough such as lung cancer or
tuberculosis.
Chronic sinusitis
with chronic sinus drainage, by irritating the back of the throat or by
provoking micro aspirations, can cause a chronic dry cough that will not abate
until the sinusitis is treated.
The diagnosis is difficult because sinus x-rays may fail to detect the
condition. A useful clinical clue
is to ask the patient to point to the site where the cough arises from. If the patient points to the neck
instead of the chest and if chronic sinusitis is clinically suspect, it may be
wise to prescribe a short course of antibiotics as a diagnostic &
therapeutic trial.
Allergies, common in
spring and fall, may cause cough by irritating the nose, sinuses, and
airways. In such cases, history is
crucial because it provides the seasonal clue. Any seasonal cough is an allergy suspect and allergy
treatments in the form of antihistamines or cortisone usually provide
relief. Reversible airway spasm is
almost always present in seasonal cough giving the condition its common name of
seasonal asthma.
Acid reflux—the
condition where stomach acid creeps up the esophagus at night when we are lying
flat—may cause cough by two mechanisms.
Cough may be due to nocturnal micro aspirations or to esophageal
irritation, both of which provoke daily cough, especially at night or upon
rising in the morning. Treating
reflux aggressively by (elevating the head of the bed, avoiding late eating and
drinking, abstaining from smoking and caffeine, and suppressing stomach acid
with medicines) usually provides relief within a week or two. A therapeutic trial confirms the
diagnosis better than any other available test.
Certain blood
pressure medications are cough provokers such as beta blockers (eg. Inderal)
and ACE inhibitors (eg. Lisinopril).
The cough may come soon after they are started or several months or even
years later. When it comes long
after such treatments are begun, it may be difficult to diagnose unless the
doctor keeps a high index of suspicion.
There is no test to diagnose medicinal cough except stopping the
medicine, which causes the cough to resolve within a few weeks.
Chronic sub-clinical
asthma is commonly associated with chronic cough and may not be obvious because
of the lack of shortness of breath and wheezing. In fact, cough may be the only symptom of sub-clinical
asthma. In such cases, testing
lung function with a breathing machine shows reversible airway obstruction,
which when treated with inhalers causes the cough to resolve.
Adult whooping cough
is common and may cause cough spells that are so prolonged and severe that they
end in vomiting. The cough may
persist for many months and responds poorly to usual treatments. The diagnosis is made by blood tests
and patience is the best approach.
Finally, the less
common causes of chronic cough should be suspected when the more common causes
have been ruled out. Investigations, which include x-rays, are indicated,
especially when coughs get worse in spite of treatments. No cough should be left undiagnosed.