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Management of acute and chronic cough
Dr Veronica White MD FRCP Clinical Lead, TB service Barts Health NHS Trust
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Definition “Cough is a forced expulsive manoeuvre against a closed glottis and which is associated with a characteristic sound”
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Acute and chronic cough
Acute cough: lasts < 3 weeks Chronic cough: lasts > 8 weeks ?3-8 weeks – difficult to define
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Acute cough Commonest new presentation to primary care
Most commonly associated with viral URTI Normally benign and self-limiting Commonest symptom associated with acute exacerbations and hospitalisations with asthma and COPD
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Acute cough – statistics (2006)
Approx £100 spend per annum on non-prescription cough medicines 12 million consultations with GPs per annum Cost to economy £979 million
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Management In general – advice only
Little evidence of pharmacological benefit from over the counter preparations “Honey and lemon” best home remedy(!) Voluntary suppression of cough may be sufficient to reduce symptoms Opiate antitussives not recommended
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Management Worrying history/symptoms: Haemoptysis Breathlessness Fever
Chest pain Weight loss Evidence of vocal cord palsy History of foreign body inhalation
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Common serious conditions associated with isolated cough
Neoplasms Infection e.g. TB Foreign body inhalation Acute allergy – anaphylaxis Interstitial lung disease
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Chronic cough
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Taking a history Age and sex – more common in middle aged women
Smoking Occupation/hobbies/pets Family history
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Taking a history Characteristics:
Onset and duration; ?diurnal variation; ?coughing on phonation Relation to infection Sputum Severe coughing spasms/paroxysms Incontinence Chemical triggers; posture; food
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Taking a history Past medical history Asthma, eosinophilic bronchitis
COPD Bronchiectasis Lung cancer Pertussis infection; atopic disease Cardiovascular disease Autoimmune disease
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Baseline investigations
Primary care Chest X-ray Spirometry Secondary care Bronchoscopy High resolution CT
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What I tell patients…. Five commonest cause of chronic cough with
normal CXR Asthma Hayfever/post nasal drip GORD Recent URTI Smoking
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Management Asthma – treat as per BTS guidelines
GORD – 8 weeks of high dose PPI Upper airways disease – antihistamine, nasal spray
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Management Also: Smoking – STOP!
Post viral cough - ?low dose steroid inhaler Treat these empirically first
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Other diagnosis COPD Infection – bacterial, TB
Interstitial lung disease including sarcoidosis Bronchiectasis Drugs – (ACE) inhibitors Foreign body
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Intractable cough Can lead to musculoskeletal chest pain,
cough rib fracture, urinary incontinence. Cough syncope has also been described where an individual collapses after a severe fit of coughing.
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Intractable cough Aggressive treatment: inhaled steroid
high dose oral steroids codeine linctus – not in simple coughs Patients with cough associated with an underlying malignancy - diamorphine and morphine - help both the pain and distress Side effects: drowsiness, and constipation.
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Specialist cough clinics
Selective diagnostics and empirical trials of treatment – cost effective Refer to specialist clinic when empirical treatment has failed Systemic, cost effective approach Management algorithms improve outcome
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Specialist investigations
Bronchial provocation testing Oesophageal testing Sinus imaging Fibreoptic laryngoscopy Cough provocation test
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Summary Most acute cough is benign, but look for additional, worrying symptoms Chronic cough: take a good history; baseline investigations Treat presumed/probable underlying cause Refer to specialist clinic if necessary
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Red flags Haemoptysis Breathlessness Fever Chest pain Weight loss
Evidence of vocal cord palsy History of foreign body inhalation
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If CXR abnormal Refer urgently to relevant service: 2 WW lung cancer
ILD clinic – Dr Gavin Thomas TB clinic – Dr Veronica White, Max Caplin clinic, Mile End Oncology
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Update on TB East London
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Epidemiology UK cases in 2013 – 7892; 38% in London
Barts Health – largest TB service in UK cases per annum; tertiary referrals Tower Hamlets – 100 cases Newham – 335 cases
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Making a diagnosis Cough +/- haemoptysis Fever Night sweats
Weight loss
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Making a diagnosis Blood tests – not specific X-rays
Samples – sputum, pus, biopsy Scans such as CT and MRI
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Baseline investigations
Sputum or pus for AFB CXR
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However….
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Coming soon…. Screening of new entrants for latent TB in primary care
Funding and commissioning will come via CCG Chemoprophylaxis will be given in TB clinics
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Summary Symptoms can be insidious
Ask about systemic symptoms – often forgotten (by patient and medics) Multi- organ disease; TB can occur at any site Samples/biopsies are crucial – send for AFB
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In Summary If in doubt, refer. Max Caplin Clinic, Mile End Hospital
Fax:
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Discussion…
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