If you are like millions of other Americans and have a debilitating, chronic cough that causes loss of sleep or disrupts your social life, you don't have to live with it, according to Montefiore Medical Center pulmonologist Peter Dicpinigaitis, MD.
"Chronic coughs are in a league by themselves. People put up with them for years, unnecessarily, until they become very serious psychosocial problems," said Dr. Dicpinigaitis, who recently opened New York City's only specialized cough center at Montefiore.
"In addition to sleep loss, chronic coughs frequently lead to problems with a spouse, disrupt family life and can discourage sufferers from undertaking the simplest of social activities, such as going to the movies," said Dr. Dicpinigaitis, who is one of the nation's few researchers to conduct ongoing clinical studies on cough.
Cough is the most common complaint for which outpatients seek medical care in the United States, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services. Most coughs can be treated by primary care physicians and many so-called post-infectious coughs due to colds resolve spontaneously within a couple of months. A smaller number become chronic cases and require special care.
"The three main causes of coughs are post-nasal drip, asthma and acid reflux," said Dr. Dicpinigaitis, who gets patient referrals from primary care physicians, internists, surgeons and other pulmonologists. "Coughs become chronic if the specific cause is not diagnosed, the appropriate medication is not used, or too little medication is used," he said.
One of Dr. Dicpinigaitis' patients is a nurse in her mid-forties who suffered for a decade with an asthma-related chronic cough. She was using an inhaler to take steroids and bronchodilators to treat her asthma; but they were not suppressing her cough. She had been to numerous other physicians about her cough and nothing they prescribed helped.
"She had what is called cough variant asthma," said Dr. Dicpinigaitis. "After diagnosing the problem, I prescribed a specific asthma medication and within a few days of taking the drug, her cough was gone. In her case, we knew the cause; it was simply a matter of adding a medication to her regimen."
Another of Dr. Dicpinigaitis' patients is an elderly woman who had been persistently coughing for a decade and had come to him because her cough had worsened in the past year. Her original physician had prescribed newer antihistamine drugs, popular because they do not cause drowsiness, to help relieve her post-nasal drip. But the drugs were not working to relieve her cough.
Suspecting that post-nasal drip was the cause of the woman's cough, Dr. Dicpinigaitis prescribed an older antihistamine drug, a combination of chlorpheniramine and pseudoephedrine. Within a few days the cough was gone. "Although, we don't understand completely why older antihistamines work better, it may be because they act on the central nervous system to suppress the cough reflex," he said.
"Patients with acid reflux who suffer from a chronic cough are frequently the most difficult to diagnose and treat," said Dr. Dicpinigaitis. "They may have only a cough and not heartburn, so it is difficult to determine that the underlying problem is reflux. Even when the cause is determined to be reflux, finding the best treatment requires patience," says Dr. Discpinigaitis. Drugs known as proton pump inhibitors, prescribed to treat acid reflux, may take weeks or months to kick in, he said, and sometimes a higher than standard dose may be required to alleviate a cough.
Dr. Dicpinigaitis, who is also the director of the Intensive Care Unit at Montefiore's Einstein Hospital Division, has conducted research on different aspects of cough and has found:
For more information about treatment for a chronic cough please call: 1-800-MD-MONTE
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