Daily News (Los Angeles)

Reactive airway disease causes severe coughing and wheezing

- Columnist By Russell Myers Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

DEAR DR. ROACH »

My spouse is still suffering from chest congestion, coughing and some laryngitis. She has never completely recovered from the cold she got in early November. She also had a bad case of COVID last April. Her symptoms have waxed and waned, but now she is wheezing in bed. (Interestin­gly and maybe relatedly, she got much worse the other morning after I sprayed some spa eucalyptus spray in the shower. Maybe she’s allergic?)

She has had two negative COVID tests this week. I was planning to take her to urgent care to at least get an inhaler or something. Any other thoughts?

— K.L.R.

It is common to get reactive airway disease after respirator­y infections from viruses like colds, the flu and especially COVID. Reactive airway disease is essentiall­y asthma. It’s called “reactive” because the airways react to things that they don’t like, including cold or dry air, dust, or other airway irritants (maybe the eucalyptus?). This causes a cough and wheezing.

Asthma is a spectrum. Some few people have severe asthma all the time, but most people with

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asthma experience mild to moderate lung stress. Some people never have symptoms except for when they’re under severe stress, whether it’s from a recent infection or exercising in the cold.

I think reactive airway disease is the most likely possibilit­y behind this, although it’s certainly possible that she has another virus, whether it’s COVID, flu, respirator­y syncytial virus or one of the other circulatin­g respirator­y viruses. She should at least be tested for flu. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing for COVID might be worthwhile, since there is so much COVID circulatin­g right now.

Standard immediate treatment is an albuterol inhaler. Steroid inhalers are also used, but they take a week or two before becoming maximally effective. The combinatio­n of the two is highly effective, and most people get good relief. There are other options, such as montelukas­t, which starts working quickly and can be stopped once symptoms go away.

My daughter was diagnosed with either a fractured rib or costochond­ritis. She is in pain, and her doctor won’t prescribe anything. (Apparently,

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her boyfriend gave her a big hug after vacation that was a little too strong.) Any thoughts about pain management options?

— A.M.

It’s unlikely (but possible) to be a rib fracture, as ribs can bend to a surprising degree. But after chest trauma like that, a person can develop inflammati­on where the rib meets the chest cartilage. “Costochond­ritis” often refers to viral inflammati­on of this area, but it can happen with trauma as well.

This inflammati­on can get triggered with every breath, but especially with a big breath, cough or sneeze; it can be exquisitel­y painful. I disagree with her doctor’s refusal to prescribe medication, as pain relief helps prevent the person from “splinting” — moving their chest in such a way to prevent the chest from expanding on the affected side.

This can lead to partial lung collapse, which can then lead to pneumonia.

I recommend anti-inflammato­ry medicines, like ibuprofen or naproxen, taken around-the-clock to minimize this possibilit­y. I have also used lidocaine patches in combinatio­n with medication. This takes weeks to heal.

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