Houston Chronicle

What to do about that annoying cough.

- By Jane E. Brody

On a South American trip last month with two of my grandsons, the younger — 14-year-old Tennyson — developed a cough. He had no fever, congestion or fatigue, said he felt fine, ate and slept normally and stayed wellhydrat­ed. But eight days later, after watching a live raptor show for 90 minutes in freezing winds, his cough was noticeably worse.

As the responsibl­e adult, I decided to get him an over-thecounter cough medicine — the Ecuadorean version of Robitussin DM. I now know that my grandmothe­r’s remedy of chicken soup or tea with honey, or perhaps a syrup with sweetened cocoa powder, as a new study found, might have been a better choice to soothe his irritated airways.

Coughs are one of the leading reasons for visits to the doctor and trips to the drugstore, where shelf-long displays of nonprescri­ption cough medicines can overwhelm even the most discerning consumer. And Americans spend some $8 billion a year on over-the-counter cough and cold products.

Yet evidence is sorely lacking for the value of any over-thecounter remedy to treat most coughs, be they wet or dry. More likely, any significan­t benefit people get from cough medicine is probably due primarily to the placebo effect: You think — you hope — it will help, so it does, at least temporaril­y. But even when cough medicines help a little, they do not cure or shorten the duration of a cough.

People anxious for relief and convinced that cough medicines

should work buy them anyway, Dr. Norman H. Edelman, a pulmonolog­ist at Stony Brook University School of Medicine and scientific adviser at the American Lung Associatio­n, told me.

He’s not suggesting that cough medicines don’t work at all, just that there is as yet no proof that they do. They are not totally free of side effects, however rare, and some can be hazardous for people with health problems like high blood pressure or congestive heart failure. And, as their labels state, they should never be given to children younger than 4. In fact, the American Academy of Pediatrics says there’s no reason to use them in children under 6.

Because manufactur­ers try to hit all bases, over-the-counter cough remedies most often contain combinatio­ns of three or four ingredient­s when a patient may need only one or two. Typical ingredient­s include a cough suppressan­t, an expectoran­t and an antihistam­ine, when better hydration or drinking hot tea with honey may be all someone really needs to quell a nagging cough.

Under normal circumstan­ces, cough is a very useful reflex that can help to clear the airways of mucus or an irritating substance and prevent debris or liquids from getting through to the lungs. Coughs become especially troublesom­e when they linger for weeks on end or when a sudden tickle triggers a coughing fit in the middle of a play, concert or lecture. (Word to the wise: Always come equipped with cough drops that can be opened quietly and, if possible, a small bottle of water to squelch a disruptive cough that won’t quit on its own.)

Most lingering coughs are the residual effect of a cold or flu, and they can last for weeks and weeks, get better or worse, and still not represent anything more than a nuisance, Edelman said. But the misery associated with coughs sends more than 30 million people to the doctor every year. And there are certainly circumstan­ces under which a doctor should be consulted.

Among them, Edelman said, are patients with underlying medical conditions like COPD (chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease) or asthma, even mild cases of asthma. “People with asthma should have an action plan establishe­d in consultati­on with their doctor — what to do ‘in case’ a cough develops,” he said. “It’s best to catch it early, when the inflammati­on just starts because it’s harder to treat when it’s well-establishe­d.”

He added, “People with a significan­t underlying health problem should not wait four weeks to see a doctor.” Also, he said, “if every winter you get cold after cold followed by a cough, you should see a doctor right away because it could represent an underlying problem.”

Other circumstan­ces that warrant medical attention include persistent coughs that interfere with the ability to sleep; coughs associated with fever, chills and feeling unwell; and coughs that produce blood in the sputum.

Then there are the coughs that become chronic, persisting beyond eight or more weeks. They could result from an irritated, inflamed airway that may require treatment with an inhaled corticoste­roid to reduce the inflammati­on, Edelman said.

Writing in The New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Ashley Woodcock and Jaclyn A. Smith estimated that chronic cough affects “as much as 12 percent of the general population.” It affects more women than men, most often in their 40s and 50s, and can persist for years “with substantia­l physical, social and psychologi­cal effects,” they wrote.

In addition to respirator­y diseases like asthma, possible causes of chronic cough include a persistent postnasal drip that may result from an allergy, sinus infection, airborne irritant, or even exposure to very dry cold air. Depending on the cause, the best treatment may involve an oral antihistam­ine, nose drops, a vaporizer or, if an infection is found, antibiotic­s. But Edelman warned against using a humidifier with a water reservoir that can become contaminat­ed with a fungus unless it is thoroughly cleaned daily. Also, overly humidifyin­g the air can foster dust mites, which are common allergens.

 ?? Gracia Lam / New York Times ??
Gracia Lam / New York Times

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