Chronic Cough

Chronic Cough

A cough is a protective, primitive reflex in healthy individuals. It serves to expectorate unwanted substances from the upper respiratory tract. A persistent cough can be debilitating, socially distressing, and adversely impair quality of life. One of the more common presentations to a medical practitioner is a dry cough.

Causes

A cough begins when an irritant — stomach acid, mucus, hair spray, perfume, even spicy food — stimulates nerves in your respiratory tract. The cough impulse travels to your brain, which then signals muscles in your stomach and diaphragm to give a strong push to air in your lungs. It takes such force to expel irritants that the speed of coughed air can approach 500 miles an hour.

An occasional cough is normal — it helps clear foreign substances and secretions from your lungs and prevents infection. But a cough that persists for long periods of time is usually the result of an underlying problem, such as:

Risk factors

Anyone can develop a chronic cough, but these factors make you more susceptible:

Screening and diagnosis

A thorough medical history and physical exam can provide important clues about a chronic cough. Tell your doctor if you take blood pressure medication, smoke or are routinely exposed to environmental pollutants. Using this information, your doctor may try to determine the cause of your cough based on your response to treatment rather than on test results.

For instance, if your doctor suspects that your cough is the result of postnasal drip, you're likely to be given an antihistamine-decongestant medication. If your cough goes away, the diagnosis is confirmed. When this approach fails, or you become frustrated with the trial-and-error process, you may have one or more of the following tests:

Complications

Having a persistent cough can be physically exhausting, both because it requires so much energy to cough and because the cough often prevents you from sleeping well. A chronic cough can also cause:

But coughing's biggest toll may be social. Many chronic coughers say that going out in public simply becomes too embarrassing — all those looks of disgust in restaurants and theaters — and that their spouse or partner often ends up moving out of the bedroom. The result is increasing isolation, frustration and anger, not just for the cougher but sometimes for friends and family, too.

Treatment

Treating a chronic cough with a known cause is usually straightforward; when the cause can't be determined, treatment becomes more problematic and frustrating. Depending on the reason for your cough, your doctor may prescribe:

Other treatments. When the reason for your cough isn't known, your doctor may prescribe a cough suppressant or possibly ipratropium bromide (Atrovent), a type of medication called a bronchodilator that relaxes the air passages in your lungs. Inhaled corticosteroids are sometimes used, though it's not clear that they're effective for a cough unrelated to asthma. Singulair, a leukotriene inhibitor, is often helpful in cough variant asthma. The physicians at Midwest Ear, Nose, and Throat can help the patient work through this frustrating condition.

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