Abstract

BackgroundThe coughs occurring during cough provocation tests are usually counted at the same time when the test is being conducted, i.e., simultaneously. It is unknown whether cough counting from video recording might increase the accuracy of the cough counting. During recent years, cough challenges with hypertonic aerosols have been introduced. They often provoke very frequent coughing which may complicate the simultaneous cough counting.ObjectiveTo assess whether cough counting from video recording is superior to simultaneous cough counting in two different hypertonic cough challenges.MethodsThe analysis includes 82 hypertonic saline challenges performed on 66 subjects, providing 1984 observation minutes with both simultaneous and video cough counting. The cough sensitivity was expressed as the osmolality to provoke 15 cumulative coughs (CUM15). The analysis also includes 136 hypertonic histamine challenges performed on 114 subjects providing 5373 observation minutes with both simultaneous and video counting. The cough sensitivity was expressed as the cumulative number of coughs divided by the final histamine concentration administered (CCR). This challenge involved several additional measurements to cough counting.ResultsFor the saline challenge, the mean difference between the counting types was 0.0 coughs per minute with 95% limits of agreement of -1.2 to 1.2 coughs per minute. For the hypertonic histamine challenge the respective figures were 0.3 (-1.9 to 2.5) coughs per minute. At high coughing frequency the video counts tended to outnumber the simultaneous counts. The counting type had no effect on the hypertonic saline CUM15 and only a marginal effect on its repeatability. On the contrary, video counting resulted to significantly higher hypertonic histamine CCR values than simultaneous counting (p < 0.001).ConclusionThe agreement between simultaneous and video counting of coughs is generally good. However, as the coughing frequency increases, simultaneous counting may miss coughs, especially if the nurse has to share his/her attention to several activities simultaneously. Video recording is advisable for the hypertonic histamine challenge but unnecessary for the hypertonic saline challenge. To ensure reliable simultaneous cough counting, cough provocation tests should be performed in a quiet environment, applying as little unnecessary equipment and measurements as possible.

Highlights

  • The coughs occurring during cough provocation tests are usually counted at the same time when the test is being conducted, i.e., simultaneously

  • Video recording is advisable for the hypertonic histamine challenge but unnecessary for the hypertonic saline challenge

  • Our challenges differ from the traditional cough provocation tests in that the cough response has usually not been the end point of the challenge [2,3,4,6] and the subjects may cough vigorously, usually much more than the 2 – 5 coughs evoked during the traditional capsaicin and citric acid challenges

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Summary

Introduction

The coughs occurring during cough provocation tests are usually counted at the same time when the test is being conducted, i.e., simultaneously. It is unknown whether cough counting from video recording might increase the accuracy of the cough counting. Cough challenges with hypertonic aerosols have been introduced. They often provoke very frequent coughing which may complicate the simultaneous cough counting. On the contrary to capsaicin and acid-provoked immediate cough response [7], hypertonic aerosol-provoked coughing usually appears after the nebulisation and can last several minutes [5]. We have only utilised the cough counts from the video recordings [5,6]

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