If the cough is post-exercise or nocturnal, or there is a wheeze on examination then consider asthma as cause of chronic cough. Take a peak flow reading and trial of bronchodilator.
If the cough is worse at night and there are crepitations on examination +/- a history of pink, frothy sputum then consider left ventricular failure. The cause should be sought. Trial of diuretic therapy.
If there is no clue from the history and the chest is clear consider allergy, drug induced cough e.g. ACE inhibitors. A paroxysmal cough in a child may be due to pertussis.
In this category the patient must be reviewed. If there is no improvement then further investigation (e.g. chest X-ray, sputum culture/ cytology, blood tests) as appropriate. There may be a need for this patient to be referred - always consider NICE urgent cancer related guidance for referral for CXR and referral for urgent specialist review (see linked items).
Notes:
Reference:
Add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation, such as a web address or phone number. This information will always be displayed when you visit this page