Abstract

The causes of chronic cough in children are mainly dependent on the setting and age of the child. Protracted bacterial bronchitis is a frequent cause of morbidity in childhood, and antibiotic treatment is beneficial. Prompt recognition and early treatment is important both to prevent inappropriate use of asthma medications and also progression to bronchiectasis, but the diagnosis should not be made uncritically, because chronic wet cough is not necessarily due to lower airway disease. Upper Airway Cough Syndrome (UACS) is considered by some to cause chronic cough in childhood. Underlying UACS are many common conditions, including allergic rhinitis, adenoiditis and rhinosinusitis. Diagnosis relies on a combination of clinical criteria that are relatively sensitive but non-specific. The role of nasal endoscopy in children with chronic cough and signs suggesting UACS is unclear. Nasal saline solution irrigation is commonly used in UACS, but most studies have methodological biases, and efficacy data are scanty. Randomized controlled trials are urgently required. However, if saline washes, rather than oral antibiotics, can effectively treat some children with wet cough associated with upper airway conditions, antibiotic resistance could potentially be reduced. There is a need to further study wet cough and not to assume it to be equivalent to lower airway infection in all children.

Highlights

  • Cough is common in childhood [1]

  • The British Thoracic Society (BTS) defined as chronic a cough lasting longer than 8 weeks [3], rather than the 4 weeks recommended by the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) [4] and the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand (TSANZ) [5]

  • The clinical presentation of the case described does not fulfill the diagnostic criteria for protracted bacterial bronchitis (PBB) since the cough lasted only 3 weeks

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Summary

Introduction

Cough is common in childhood [1]. Spontaneous resolution of cough after an acute respiratory illness (ARI) typically occurs in 2–3 weeks, but occasionally children may cough longer [2]. The British Thoracic Society (BTS) defined as chronic a cough lasting longer than 8 weeks [3], rather than the 4 weeks recommended by the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) [4] and the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand (TSANZ) [5]. The decision to include an intermediate time zone, defined as “prolonged acute cough” in the BTS guideline, was to allow a period for cough resolution for the minority of normal children who are still coughing with a simple cold after 2–3 weeks. Frontiers in Pediatrics | www.frontiersin.org de Benedictis et al

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