Cough Flashcards

1
Q

What are the causes of cough in infancy

A

Infections: URTI, bronchiolitis, pneumonia
Congenital malformations of the airway e.g. laryngomalacia
Viral induce wheeze
Gastro-oesophageal reflux
Cystic fibrosis

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2
Q

What are the causes of cough in pre-school

A

Infections: URTI, croup, bronchiolitis, pneumonia, pertussis, viral induced wheeze
Foreign body
Asthma
Cystic fibrosis
Passive smoking

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3
Q

What are the causes of cough in school-age to adolescence

A

Asthma
Infections: URTI, pneumonia
Cigarettes smoking
Postnasal drip
Psychogenic
Cystic fibrosis

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4
Q

What are the red flag symptoms for cough

A

Productive cough which improves with antibiotics but quickly recurs
Restriction of activity
Failure to thrive
Clubbing
Persistent tachypnoea

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5
Q

What is suggested by a loose, productive cough

A

Bronchitis, wheezy bronchitis, cystic fibrosis, bronchiectasis

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6
Q

What is suggested by a wheezy cough

A

Asthma, wheezy bronchitis, viral induced wheeze

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7
Q

What is suggested by a barking cough

A

Croup

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8
Q

What is suggested by a paroxysmal cough

A

Cystic fibrosis, pertussis, foreign body, asthma

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9
Q

What is suggested by a nocturnal cough

A

Asthma, sinusitis

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10
Q

What is suggested by a cough most severe on waking

A

Cystic fibrosis, bronchiectasis

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11
Q

What is suggested by a cough that occurs with vigorous exercise

A

Exercise-induced asthma, cystic fibrosis, bronchiectasis

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12
Q

What is suggested by a cough that disappears with sleep

A

Habit cough

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13
Q

What should be looked for on examination for a cough

A

General: ?tachpnoea, ?fever
Weight and height: ?FTT
Resp:
- Bronchial breathing / stridor
- Wheeze
- Crackles: course (pneumonia, bronchiectasis), or fine (bronchiolitis)
- Inspiratory whoop
- Reduced chest wall movements unilaterally
- Clear chest
- Use of accessory muscles

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14
Q

What investigations should be done for a cough of unknown cause

A

Bedside: pernasal swab
Bloods: FBC, blood culture
Other: CXR, CXR and barium swallow, sweat testing, videofluoroscopy and bronchoscopy (foreign body), trial of bronchodilators

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15
Q

What are the red flag symptoms for children with cough

A

Check on the child regularly, including through the night. Seek help if:
Breathing rate increases
Any episodes of apnoea
Signs of increased effort of breathing
Baby takes <50% of normal feeds
Signs of dehydration: dry mouth, infrequent passage of urine
Baby becomes less responsive or difficult to rouse
Persistent worsening of fever

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16
Q

What causes whooping cough

A

Bordetella pertussis (bacteria) → produces pertussis toxin
Transmitted by aerosol droplets
Infectious for 21 days (unless Abx)
A previously infected person can become re-infected, but the subsequent infections are usually less severe

17
Q

What are the symptoms of whooping cough

A

3 phases:
1. Catarrhal phase (1-2 weeks)
- nasal discharge, conjunctivitis, malaise, sore throat, fever, dry unproductive cough
2. Paroxysmal phase (1-6 weeks)
- Paroxysms/cough: severe dry cough
- May vomit/be apnoeic after/between
- More common at night
- May be productive: thick mucous plug/watery secretion
- Inspiratory ‘whoop’ heard
- Otherwise well, sleep undisturbed
3. Convalescent phase (up to 3 months)
- Gradual improvement in cough frequency and severity

18
Q

What are the differentials for whooping cough

A

Mycoplasma infection
Chlamydia pneumoniae/trachomatis
Adenoviruses
Bronchiolitis
Asthma
URTI
GORD

19
Q

What are the signs of whooping cough on examination

A

No crackles/crepitations and no wheeze

20
Q

What investigations should be done for whooping cough

A

bedside: nasopharyngeal swab/aspirate for PCR and culture
Bloods: anti-pertussis toxin IgG serology

21
Q

What is the criteria for whooping cough diagnosis

A

Clinical features with:
1. Bordetella pertussis isolated from a nasopharyngeal aspirate or nasopharyngeal/pernasal swab, or
2. Detection by real-time PCR of the pertussis toxin S1 promoter region (ptxA-pr), and the insertion element IS481, or
3. Anti-pertussis toxin IgG detected in serum or oral fluid in the absence of vaccination within the past year.

22
Q

What is the management for whooping cough

A

Notify local public health england (PHE) centre within 3 days (notifiable disease)
First line: Abx (presenting within 21 days)
- <1 month: clarithromycin
- >1 month: azithromycin

+ advice
- Rest (rest only if >21 days)
- Adequate fluid intake
- Paracetamol/ibuprofen
- Even with treatment there may be a non-infectious cough
- Isolate until 48h of abx treatment OR 21 days after symptoms started
- Contacts may require prophylaxis

23
Q

Who requires prophylaxis for whooping cough

A

Premature (<32w) unimmunised infants <2 months of age
Unimmunised infants (>32w birth) <2 months of age, no maternal pertussis vaccine
unimmunised/partially unimmunised >2 months
Pregnant women >32w
Healthcare workers working with infants and children
Those who share a household with infants too young to be fully vaccinated

24
Q

Describe the whooping cough vaccine

A

Reduces risk of developing pertussis, does NOT provide absolute protection
Protection level declines during childhood
Immunisation of mothers in pregnancy → reduces risk of pertussis of the infant in the first few months
Offered at 16-32 weeks

25
Q

What are the complications of whooping cough

A

Post-infectious cough: May last for 3 months or more - “the one hundred day cough”
Apnoea
Pneumonia
Seizures
Encephalopathy
Otitis media
Unilateral hearing loss
Bronchiectasis
Increased intra-thoracic and intra-abdominal pressure: pneumothorax, umbilical and inguinal hernia, rectal prolapse, rib fracture, herniation of lumbar intervertebral discs, urinary incontinence, subconjunctival or scleral haemorrhage
Frequent post-tussive vomiting can lead to severe dehydration and/or malnutrition.

26
Q

What is the prognosis for whooping cough

A

For people who have not previously contracted whooping cough AND are not vaccinated: may be left with a protracted cough that can last 3 months or more
Previous vaccination or infection: short-lived, mild symptoms and an isolated persistent cough
Mortality rate in children <6 months is 3.5%