Causes of Cough
Causes of Cough (Diseases Database):
The follow list shows some of the possible medical causes of Cough
that are listed by the Diseases Database:
Source: Diseases Database
Cough Causes: Book Excerpts
- Differential Diagnosis - Hemoptysis
- Differential Diagnosis - Sore Throat
- Differential Diagnosis - Cough - Productive
- Differential Diagnosis - Cough - Nonproductive
- Differential Diagnosis - Stridor & Wheezing
- Differential Diagnosis - Hemoptysis
- Differential Diagnosis - Sore Throat
- Differential Diagnosis - Stridor
- Differential Diagnosis - Wheezing
- Differential Diagnosis - Cough – Acute
- Differential Diagnosis - Cough – Chronic
- Medical causes - Hemoptysis
- Medical causes - Stridor
- Medical causes - Cough, productive
- Medical causes - Cough, barking
- Medical causes - Cough, nonproductive
- Medical causes - Wheezing [Sibilant rhonchi]
- Causes and incidence - Whooping cough
- Medical causes - Hemoptysis
- Medical causes - Stridor
- Medical causes - Cough, productive
- Medical causes - Cough, barking
- Medical causes - Cough, nonproductive
- Medical causes - Wheezing [Sibilant rhonchi]
- Differential Overview - Hemoptysis
- Differential Overview - Sore Throat
- Differential Overview - Wheezing
- Differential Overview - Acute Cough
- Differential Overview - Chronic Cough
- Medical causes - Hemoptysis
- Medical causes - Stridor
- Medical causes - Wheezing
- Medical causes - Cough, productive
- Medical causes - Cough, barking
- Medical causes - Hemoptysis
- Medical causes - Stridor
- Medical causes - Wheezing
- Medical causes - Cough, productive
- Medical causes - Cough, barking
- Medical causes - Cough, nonproductive
- Principal Causes of Hemoptysis - Hemoptysis
- Principal Causes of Sore Throat - Sore Throat
- Principal Causes of Wheezing - Wheezing
- Principal Causes of Cough - Cough
- Principal Causes of Airway Obstruction - Stertor, Stridor, and Airway Obstruction
- Medical causes - Hemoptysis
- Medical causes - Stridor
- Medical causes - Cough, productive
- Medical causes - Cough, barking
- Medical causes - Cough, nonproductive
- Medical causes - Wheezing [Sibilant rhonchi]
- I. Differential Diagnosis - Cough - Case 4-2 7-Week-Old Boy
- I. Differential Diagnosis - Cough - Case 4-3 7-Month-Old Girl
- I. Differential Diagnosis - Cough - Case 4-6 4-Month-Old Boy
- Cough - pathophysiology - Cough
Cough as a complication of other conditions:
Other conditions that might have
Cough as a complication may,
potentially, be an underlying cause of Cough.
Our database lists the following as having
Cough as a complication of that condition:
Cough as a symptom:
Conditions listing Cough
as a symptom may also be potential underlying causes of Cough.
Our database lists the following as having
Cough as a symptom of that condition:
- Actinomycetales infection
- Acute (or transient) urinary incontinence
- Acute Bronchitis
- Acute Chemical poisoning - Varnish makers' and painters' Naptha
- Acute elemental mercury inhalation
- Acute lower respiratory conditions
- Acute mercury inhalation
- Acute Pesticide poisoning - xylene
- Acute Renal Failure
- Acute upper respiratory infection
- Adenocarcinoma of lung
- Adenocarcinoma, Bronchiolo-Alveolar
- Adenocarcinoma, Follicular
- Adenoid cystic carcinoma
- Adenophorea Infections
- Adenoviridae Infections
- Adenovirus infection in immunocompromised patients
- Adenovirus-related Cold
- Adult-onset asthma
- Adverse reaction to chemical - Allyl trichloride
- AIDS
- Airborne allergy
- Allergic asthma
- Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
- Allergic tension-fatigue syndrome
- Allergies
- Alpha 1-Antitrypsin Deficiency
- Alport Syndrome
- Alport syndrome - mental retardation - midface hypoplasia - elliptocytosis
- Alport syndrome with macrothrombocytopenia
- Alveolar Hydatid Disease
- Analgesic asthma syndrome
- Ancylostoma duodenale
- Angiofollicular lymph hyperplasia
- Angiosarcoma
- Animal allergy
- Ankylostomiasis
- Anthrax
- Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic
- Asbestos conditions
- Asbestosis
- Ascariasis
- Asherson syndrome
- Aspergillosis
- Aspirin-induced asthma
- Asthma
- Asthma in pregnancy
- Asthma, Exercise-Induced
- Asthma-related traits, susceptibility to, 1
- Asthma-related traits, susceptibility to, 2
- Asthma-related traits, susceptibility to, 3
- Asthma-related traits, susceptibility to, 4
- Asthma-related traits, susceptibility to, 5
- Asthma-related traits, susceptibility to, 6
- Asthma-related traits, susceptibility to, 7
- Atopic asthma
- Atrial myxoma, familial
- Aureobasidium exposure
- Autoimmune diseases
- Bagassosis
- Bagassosis - Thermoactinomyces sacchari
- Baritosis
- Barley Worker's disease - Aspergillus spp.
- Beau's syndrome
- Berry aneurysm, cirrhosis, pulmonary emphysema, and cerebral calcification
- Besnier-Boeck-Schaumann disease
- Bird allergy
- Bird flu (avian influenza)
- Black mustard poisoning
- Blastomycosis
- Blue and bloated syndrome
- Bouillaud's syndrome
- Brill disease
- Bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia
- Bronchiolitis obliterans with obstructive pulmonary disease
- Bronchitis
- Bronchogenic carcinoma
- Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
- Byssinosis
- Callistin shellfish poisoning
- Canary allergy
- Cancer
- Carcinoma of the vocal tract
- Cardiac malformation
- Cardiac valvular dysplasia, X-linked
- Cat allergy
- Centriacinar Emphysema
- Cheese Washer's lung
- Cheese Washer's lung - Penicillium spp.
- Chemical allergy
- Chemical burn
- Chemical burn - airways
- Chemical burn - inhalation
- Chemical pneumonia
- Chemical poisoning - 1,2-Dibromoethane
- Chemical poisoning - 1,3-Butadiene
- Chemical poisoning - 1,3-Dichloropropene
- Chemical poisoning - 1-Amino-2-propanol
- Chemical poisoning - 1-Pentanethiol
- Chemical poisoning - 2,4,6-Trichlorophenol
- Chemical poisoning - 2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene
- Chemical poisoning - 2,4-Dichlorophenol
- Chemical poisoning - 2-Amino-2-methylpropanol
- Chemical poisoning - 2-Butoxyethanol
- Chemical poisoning - 2-Hexanone
- Chemical poisoning - 3,3-Dichlorobenzidine
- Chemical poisoning - Acenaphthene
- Chemical poisoning - Acetaldehyde
- Chemical poisoning - acetic acid
- Chemical poisoning - Acetic Anhydride
- Chemical poisoning - Acetone
- Chemical poisoning - Acetylene Tetrabromide
- Chemical poisoning - Acrolein
- Chemical poisoning - Acrylamide
- Chemical poisoning - Acrylic acid
- Chemical poisoning - Adipic Acid
- Chemical poisoning - Allyl chloride
- Chemical poisoning - Allylamines
- Chemical poisoning - Aluminum Phosphide
- Chemical poisoning - Amidithion
- Chemical poisoning - Amiton
- Chemical poisoning - Ammonia
- Chemical poisoning - Ammonium Chloride
- Chemical poisoning - Ammonium Nitrate
- Chemical poisoning - Ammonium Sulfamate
- Chemical poisoning - Anisole
- Chemical poisoning - Antimony
- Chemical poisoning - Asphalt
- Chemical poisoning - Athyl-Gusathion
- Chemical poisoning - Azinfos-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Azinfosethyl
- Chemical poisoning - Azinophos-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Azinphos
- Chemical poisoning - Azinphos-ethyl
- Chemical poisoning - Azinphos-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Azinphosmetile
- Chemical poisoning - Azothoate
- Chemical poisoning - Barium Nitrate
- Chemical poisoning - Benoxafos
- Chemical poisoning - Benzene
- Chemical poisoning - Beryllium
- Chemical poisoning - Biphenyl
- Chemical poisoning - Borates
- Chemical poisoning - Boric Acid
- Chemical poisoning - Bromates
- Chemical poisoning - Bromide
- Chemical poisoning - Bromophos
- Chemical poisoning - Bromophos-ethyl
- Chemical poisoning - Button batteries
- Chemical poisoning - Butyl Alcohol
- Chemical poisoning - Butylamines
- Chemical poisoning - Cadmium
- Chemical poisoning - Cadusafos
- Chemical poisoning - Calcium Oxide
- Chemical poisoning - Calcium Polysulfide
- Chemical poisoning - Camphor
- Chemical poisoning - Captafol
- Chemical poisoning - Carbon Black
- Chemical poisoning - Carbophenothion
- Chemical poisoning - Chalk
- Chemical poisoning - Chloralose
- Chemical poisoning - Chlorfenvinphos
- Chemical poisoning - Chlorine
- Chemical poisoning - Chlorine Dioxide
- Chemical poisoning - Chloroacetophenone
- Chemical poisoning - Chlorobenzylidene Malononitrile
- Chemical poisoning - Chloropicrin
- Chemical poisoning - Chloropyrifos
- Chemical poisoning - Chlorpyrifos methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Chromium
- Chemical poisoning - Cresols
- Chemical poisoning - Cresylic acid
- Chemical poisoning - Cyanthoate
- Chemical poisoning - Cyclohexanol
- Chemical poisoning - Cyclohexanone
- Chemical poisoning - Demeton
- Chemical poisoning - Demeton-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Demeton-O
- Chemical poisoning - Demeton-O-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Demeton-S-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Demeton-S-methylsulphon
- Chemical poisoning - Dialifos
- Chemical poisoning - Diazinon
- Chemical poisoning - Dibenzoyl Peroxide
- Chemical poisoning - Diborane
- Chemical poisoning - Dibromochloromethane
- Chemical poisoning - Dichlorvos
- Chemical poisoning - Dimethoate
- Chemical poisoning - Dimethyl Phthalate
- Chemical poisoning - Dimethylamine
- Chemical poisoning - Dioxathion
- Chemical poisoning - Diquat Dibromide
- Chemical poisoning - Disulfoton
- Chemical poisoning - Emulsion paints
- Chemical poisoning - Endothion
- Chemical poisoning - Epichlorohydrin
- Chemical poisoning - Ether
- Chemical poisoning - Ethion
- Chemical poisoning - Ethoate-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Ethoprophos
- Chemical poisoning - Ethyl Methacrylate
- Chemical poisoning - Ethyl-guthion
- Chemical poisoning - Ethylamine
- Chemical poisoning - Ethylene Dichloride
- Chemical poisoning - Ethylene Glycol
- Chemical poisoning - Ethylenediamine
- Chemical poisoning - Etrimfos
- Chemical poisoning - Fenchlorphos
- Chemical poisoning - Fenitrothion
- Chemical poisoning - Fensulfothion
- Chemical poisoning - Fenthion
- Chemical poisoning - Fonophos
- Chemical poisoning - Formaldehyde
- Chemical poisoning - Formothion
- Chemical poisoning - Furfural
- Chemical poisoning - Glaze
- Chemical poisoning - Glutaraldehyde
- Chemical poisoning - Glyphosate
- Chemical poisoning - Graphite
- Chemical poisoning - Guthion (ethyl)
- Chemical poisoning - Heptenophos
- Chemical poisoning - Hexachlorobutadiene
- Chemical poisoning - Hexachlorocyclopentadiene
- Chemical poisoning - Hexamethylene Diisocyanate
- Chemical poisoning - Hydrazine
- Chemical poisoning - Hydrogen Chloride
- Chemical poisoning - Hydrogen Sulfide
- Chemical poisoning - Iodofenphos
- Chemical poisoning - Isopropyl Alcohol
- Chemical poisoning - Jewelry cleaner
- Chemical poisoning - Kerosene
- Chemical poisoning - Lacquer
- Chemical poisoning - Lewisite
- Chemical poisoning - Lighter fluid
- Chemical poisoning - Malathion
- Chemical poisoning - Manganese
- Chemical poisoning - Mecarbam
- Chemical poisoning - Metal cleaner
- Chemical poisoning - Metal polish
- Chemical poisoning - Methacrifos
- Chemical poisoning - Methamidophos
- Chemical poisoning - Methane
- Chemical poisoning - Methidathion
- Chemical poisoning - Methyl Ethyl Ketone
- Chemical poisoning - Methyl Isocyanate
- Chemical poisoning - Methyl Mercaptan
- Chemical poisoning - Methylene Diisocyanate
- Chemical poisoning - Metiltriazotion
- Chemical poisoning - Metobromuron
- Chemical poisoning - Mevinphos
- Chemical poisoning - Mirex
- Chemical poisoning - Molybdenum
- Chemical poisoning - Monocrotophos
- Chemical poisoning - Monosodium Methanarsenate
- Chemical poisoning - Morpholine
- Chemical poisoning - Mould remover
- Chemical poisoning - N-Butyl Chloride
- Chemical poisoning - Nickel Carbonyl
- Chemical poisoning - Nitric Acid
- Chemical poisoning - Nitroethane
- Chemical poisoning - Nitrofen
- Chemical poisoning - Nitrogen Dioxide
- Chemical poisoning - Nitromethane
- Chemical poisoning - Nitrophenol
- Chemical poisoning - Nitrophenol Urea
- Chemical poisoning - Oil-based paint
- Chemical poisoning - Omethoate
- Chemical poisoning - Osmium
- Chemical poisoning - Oxydeprofos
- Chemical poisoning - Oxydisulfoton
- Chemical poisoning - Palladium
- Chemical poisoning - Para-Dichlorobenzene
- Chemical poisoning - Paraphenylenediamine
- Chemical poisoning - Parathion
- Chemical poisoning - Parathion Methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Pentachlorophenol
- Chemical poisoning - Petroleum Distillates - Naphtha
- Chemical poisoning - Phenkapton
- Chemical poisoning - Phorate
- Chemical poisoning - Phosalone
- Chemical poisoning - Phosmet
- Chemical poisoning - Phosphamidon
- Chemical poisoning - Phosphine
- Chemical poisoning - Phoxim
- Chemical poisoning - Phthalthrin
- Chemical poisoning - Pirimiphos-methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Platinum
- Chemical poisoning - Polychlorinated Dibenzofurans
- Chemical poisoning - Pool Cleaners
- Chemical poisoning - Potassium Permanganate
- Chemical poisoning - Primiphos methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Prothidathion
- Chemical poisoning - Prothoate
- Chemical poisoning - Pyrethrin
- Chemical poisoning - Pyridine
- Chemical poisoning - Pyrimitate
- Chemical poisoning - Quinalphos
- Chemical poisoning - Quintiofos
- Chemical poisoning - Rhodium
- Chemical poisoning - Rotenone
- Chemical poisoning - Selenium Dioxide
- Chemical poisoning - Silver
- Chemical poisoning - Sodium Azide
- Chemical poisoning - Sodium Hypochlorite
- Chemical poisoning - Sodium Oleate
- Chemical poisoning - Sophamide
- Chemical poisoning - Sulfotep
- Chemical poisoning - Sulfur Dioxide
- Chemical poisoning - Sulfur Trioxide
- Chemical poisoning - Sulfuric Acid
- Chemical poisoning - Sulfuryl Fluoride
- Chemical poisoning - Tar remover
- Chemical poisoning - Tecnazene
- Chemical poisoning - Terbufos
- Chemical poisoning - Tetrachloroethane
- Chemical poisoning - Tetrachloroethylene
- Chemical poisoning - Tetrahydrofuran
- Chemical poisoning - Tetramethrin
- Chemical poisoning - Tetryl
- Chemical poisoning - Thioglycolic Acid
- Chemical poisoning - Thiometon
- Chemical poisoning - Thiram
- Chemical poisoning - Thorium
- Chemical poisoning - Tin
- Chemical poisoning - Titanium
- Chemical poisoning - Tolclofos methyl
- Chemical poisoning - Toluene Diisocyanate
- Chemical poisoning - Triazophos
- Chemical poisoning - Triazotion
- Chemical poisoning - Trichloroethane
- Chemical poisoning - Triethanolamine
- Chemical poisoning - Trifenfos
- Chemical poisoning - Trimellitic Anhydride
- Chemical poisoning - Tungsten
- Chemical poisoning - Turpentine Oil
- Chemical poisoning - Vamidothion
- Chemical poisoning - Vanadium
- Chemical poisoning - Vinyl Acetate
- Chemical poisoning - Window cleaner
- Chemical poisoning - Xylene
- Chemical poisoning - Zinc Phosphide
- Chemical worker's lung (Ammonia)
- Chemical worker's lung (Chlorine)
- Chemical worker's lung (Formalin vapours)
- Chemical worker's lung (Hydrogen Sulfide)
- Chemical worker's lung (Methylene Diisocyanate)
- Chemical worker's lung (Nitrogen dioxide)
- Chemical worker's lung (Ozone)
- Chemical worker's lung (Phosgene)
- Chemical worker's lung (Sulfur dioxide)
- Chemical worker's lung (Trimellitic anhydride)
- Chemical worker's lung - Lacquer
- Chemical worker's lung - Varnish
- Chicken allergy
- Childhood asthma
- Cholesterol pneumonia
- Chronic berylliosis
- Chronic Bronchitis
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Chronic Granulomatous Disease
- Chronic Kidney Disease
- Chronic laryngotracheitis
- Chronic Myeloproliferative Disorders
- Chronic pneumonitis of infancy
- Chronic Sinusitis
- Cigarette smoke allergy
- Ciliary dyskinesia-bronchiectasis
- Coal worker's pneumoconiosis
- Coccidioidomycosis
- Coffee Worker's lung
- Collapsed lung
- Common cold
- Congenital bronchogenic cyst
- Congenital herpes simplex
- Congenital mitral malformation
- Congenital mitral stenosis
- Cor Triatriatum
- Coronavirus-related Cold
- Coxsackievirus-related Cold
- Croup
- Cryptococcosis
- Cystic Fibrosis
- Defibrination syndrome
- Dengue hemorrhagic fever
- Dermatomyositis
- Detergent worker's disease
- Dextrocardia-bronchiectasis-sinusitis
- Diffuse leiomyomatosis with Alport syndrome
- Diffuse panbronchiolitis
- Dilated cardiomyopathy
- Dirofilaria immitis infection
- Distomatosis
- Dog allergy
- Drug Allergies
- Drug-induced asthma
- Duck allergy
- Dust mite allergies
- Eagle's syndrome
- Echovirus-related Cold
- Ehrlichiosis
- Eisenmenger Syndrome
- Emotional stress related asthma
- Endocardial fibroelastosis
- Endodermal sinus tumor
- Enterovirus-related Cold
- Eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome
- Eosinophilic asthma
- Epiglotitis
- Erdheim-Chester syndrome
- Erythema multiforme
- Esophageal Atresia and/or Tracheoesophageal Fistula
- Esophageal atresia with tracheoesophageal fistula
- Esophageal disorder
- Esophagus Cancer
- Eucalyptus Oil poisoning
- Exercise-induced asthma
- Extragonadal Germ Cell Tumor
- Extrinsic asthma
- Farmer's lung
- Farmer's lung - Micropolyspora faeni
- Farmer's lung - Thermoactinomyces vulgaris
- Fascioliasis
- Feather Plucker's lung
- Fish meal worker's lung
- Flu
- Fluke infections
- Follicular dendritic cell sarcoma
- Food Additive Allergy
- Food Additive Allergy - amaranth
- Food Additive Allergy - Annatto
- Food Additive Allergy - benzoate
- Food Additive Allergy - carageenan gum
- Food Additive Allergy - Carmine
- Food Additive Allergy - erythrosine
- Food Additive Allergy - guar gum
- Food Additive Allergy - gum
- Food Additive Allergy - gum acacia
- Food Additive Allergy - gum tragacanth
- Food Additive Allergy - lecithin
- Food Additive Allergy - locust bean gum
- Food Additive Allergy - quinoline yellow
- Food Additive Allergy - saffron
- Food Additive Allergy - salicytes
- Food Additive Allergy - sulphite
- Food Additive Allergy - sulphite derivative
- Food Additive Allergy - sunset yellow
- Food Additive Allergy - tartrazine
- Food Additive Allergy - xanthan gum
- Food Allergy - abalone
- Food Allergy - almond
- Food Allergy - aniseed
- Food Allergy - apple
- Food Allergy - apricot
- Food Allergy - avocado
- Food Allergy - banana
- Food Allergy - barley
- Food Allergy - bean
- Food Allergy - beef
- Food Allergy - beer
- Food Allergy - bell pepper
- Food Allergy - brazil nut
- Food Allergy - buckwheat
- Food Allergy - cabbage
- Food Allergy - carp
- Food Allergy - carrot
- Food Allergy - cashew
- Food Allergy - castor bean
- Food Allergy - celery
- Food Allergy - chamomile tea
- Food Allergy - cherry
- Food Allergy - chestnut
- Food Allergy - chick pea
- Food Allergy - chicken meat
- Food Allergy - cinnamon
- Food Allergy - coconut
- Food Allergy - codfish
- Food Allergy - Coriander
- Food Allergy - crab
- Food Allergy - crayfish
- Food Allergy - cumin
- Food Allergy - date palm
- Food Allergy - duck meat
- Food Allergy - fennel
- Food Allergy - fish
- Food Allergy - frog
- Food Allergy - garbanzo (legume)
- Food Allergy - garlic
- Food Allergy - goose meat
- Food Allergy - hazelnut
- Food Allergy - hops
- Food Allergy - kidney bean
- Food Allergy - kiwi fruit
- Food Allergy - lamb
- Food Allergy - lentil
- Food Allergy - lettuce
- Food Allergy - lima bean
- Food Allergy - Linden tea
- Food Allergy - lobster
- Food Allergy - lychee
- Food Allergy - mackerel
- Food Allergy - mango
- Food Allergy - meat
- Food Allergy - melon
- Food Allergy - milk
- Food Allergy - mollusk
- Food Allergy - MSG
- Food Allergy - mussel
- Food Allergy - mustard leaf
- Food Allergy - oat
- Food Allergy - olive
- Food Allergy - oranges
- Food Allergy - papaya
- Food Allergy - paprika
- Food Allergy - parsley
- Food Allergy - pea
- Food Allergy - peach
- Food Allergy - peanuts
- Food Allergy - pear
- Food Allergy - pecan
- Food Allergy - pine nut
- Food Allergy - pineapple
- Food Allergy - plantain
- Food Allergy - plum
- Food Allergy - pomegranates
- Food Allergy - pork
- Food Allergy - potato
- Food Allergy - pumpkin
- Food Allergy - Quorn
- Food Allergy - red meat
- Food Allergy - rice
- Food Allergy - rye
- Food Allergy - salmon
- Food Allergy - scallop
- Food Allergy - sesame
- Food Allergy - shellfish
- Food Allergy - shrimp
- Food Allergy - snail
- Food Allergy - soy
- Food Allergy - soybean
- Food Allergy - spices
- Food Allergy - strawberry
- Food Allergy - sulfite
- Food Allergy - sunflower seeds
- Food Allergy - thyme
- Food Allergy - tomato
- Food Allergy - tree nuts
- Food Allergy - tuna
- Food Allergy - turnip
- Food Allergy - turtle
- Food Allergy - vegetable oil
- Food Allergy - walnuts
- Food Allergy - watermelon
- Food Allergy - wheat
- Food Allergy - zucchini
- Food allergy related asthma
- Furrier's lung
- Gastric Reflux
- Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease
- Gnathostoma hispidum infection
- Gnathostoma Infection
- Gnathostoma spinigerum infection
- Gonionemus poisoning
- Goodpasture syndrome
- Goose allergy
- Graphite Pneumoconiosis
- Grass pollen allergy
- Hantavirus
- Hay fever
- Hay Worker's disease - Aspergillus spp.
- Heart failure
- Heerfordt syndrome
- Heiner syndrome
- Helminth infections
- Helminthiasis
- Hemorragic fever with renal syndrome
- Hemosiderosis
- Herbal Agent adverse reaction - Kombucha
- Herbal Agent overdose - Kombucha
- Herbal Agent overdose - Sabah vegetable
- Heroin dependence
- High altitude pulmonary edema
- Histoplasmosis
- HIV/AIDS
- Hookworm
- House dust allergy
- Human granulocytic ehrlichiosis
- Human monocytic ehrlichiosis
- Humidifier lung
- Humidifier lung - Acanthamoeba spp.
- Humidifier lung - Bacillus spp.
- Humidifier lung - Naegleria gruberi
- Humidifier lung - Penicillum spp.
- Hydrocarbon poisoning
- Hypereosinophilic syndrome
- Idiopathic acute eosinophilic pneumonia
- Idiopathic eosinophilic chronic pneumopathy
- Idiopathic myopathy
- Idiopathic subglottic tracheal stenosis
- IgE mediated gastrointestinal food allergy
- Infant asthma
- Intrinsic asthma
- Juniper tar poisoning
- Labrador lung
- Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis
- Laryngeal carcinoma
- Laryngitis
- Laryngopharyngeal reflux
- Larynx Cancer
- Left heart failure
- Legionella adelaidensis infection
- Legionella anisa infection
- Legionella beliardensis infection
- Legionella birminghamensis infection
- Legionella bozemanii infection
- Legionella bruneiensis infection
- Legionella brunensis infection
- Legionella busanensis infection
- Legionella cherrii infection
- Legionella cincinnatiensis infection
- Legionella donaldsonii infection
- Legionella donaldsonil infection
- Legionella drancourtii infection
- Legionella drozanskii infection
- Legionella dumofii infection
- Legionella erythra infection
- Legionella fairfieldensis infection
- Legionella fallonii infection
- Legionella feelei infection
- Legionella feeleii infection
- Legionella gesstiana infection
- Legionella gormanii infection
- Legionella gratiana infection
- Legionella gresilensis infection
- Legionella hackeliae infection
- Legionella impletisoli infection
- Legionella isrealensis infection
- Legionella jamestowniensis infection
- Legionella jordanis infection
- Legionella lansingensis infection
- Legionella londinensis infection
- Legionella longbeachae infection
- Legionella lytica infection
- Legionella maceachemii infection
- Legionella maceachernii infection
- Legionella micdadei infection
- Legionella monrovica infection
- Legionella moravica infection
- Legionella nautarum infection
- Legionella oakridgensis infection
- Legionella parisiensis infection
- Legionella quateirensis infection
- Legionella quinlivanii infection
- Legionella rowbothamii infection
- Legionella rubrilucens infection
- Legionella sainthelensi infection
- Legionella santicrucis infection
- Legionella shakespearei infection
- Legionella spiritensis infection
- Legionella steigerwaltii infection
- Legionella tauriensis infection
- Legionella tusconensis infection
- Legionella wadsorthii infection
- Legionella wadsworthii infection
- Legionella waltersii infection
- Legionella worsliensis infection
- Legionella yabuuchiae infection
- Legionnaires' disease
- Leiomyomatosis of esophagus, cataract and hematuria
- Leukocytoclastic angiitis - systemic
- Loeffler's endocarditis
- Lung abscess
- Lung cancer
- Lung conditions
- Lung scarring
- Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
- Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis
- Lymphoid interstitial pneumonia
- Lymphomatoid Granulomatosis
- Magrassi-Leonardi syndrome
- Malignant germ cell tumor
- Malignant mesothelioma
- Malt Worker's disease
- Malt Worker's disease - Aspergillus spp.
- Manganese poisoning
- Meadows syndrome
- Measles
- Melioidosis
- Meningococcal infection
- Mercury poisoning
- Mesothelioma
- Mesothelioma, adult malignant
- Mesothelioma, adult malignant - pleural
- Metabolic Acidosis
- Metal fume fever
- Metal Fume Fever - Aluminium
- Metal Fume Fever - Antimony
- Metal Fume Fever - Cadmium
- Metal Fume Fever - Chromium
- Metal Fume Fever - Copper
- Metal Fume Fever - Iron
- Metal Fume Fever - Magnesium
- Metal Fume Fever - Manganese
- Metal Fume Fever - Nickel
- Metal Fume Fever - Selenium
- Metal Fume Fever - Silver
- Metal Fume Fever - Tin
- Metal Fume Fever - Zinc
- Metapneumovirus
- Microsporidiosis
- Mixed asthma
- Mixed granulocytic asthma
- Mixed type non small cell carcinoma
- Mold allergies
- Mollusk-shell hypersensitivity - inhalation
- Mouldy shower curtain hypersensitivity pneumonitis
- Mounier-Kuhn syndrome
- Mucormycosis
- Mushroom Worker's lung - Micropolyspora faeni
- Mushroom Worker's lung - Thermoactinomyces vulgaris
- Mycobacterial infections
- Mycoplasmal pneumonia
- Mycosis fungoides
- Mycosis fungoides, familial
- Neutrophilic asthma
- Nickel - adverse effect
- Nicotine addiction
- Nocardiosis
- Non-allergic asthma
- Non-atopic asthma
- Non-Food Allergy - Aesculus pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - Alder
- Non-Food Allergy - Alder tree
- Non-Food Allergy - amaranthus
- Non-Food Allergy - American feverfew
- Non-Food Allergy - Ash juniper tree pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - ash tree
- Non-Food Allergy - beech tree
- Non-Food Allergy - Beet
- Non-Food Allergy - bent grass
- Non-Food Allergy - Bermuda grass
- Non-Food Allergy - birch tree
- Non-Food Allergy - Bluegrass
- Non-Food Allergy - box elder tree
- Non-Food Allergy - Canary grass
- Non-Food Allergy - Capeweed
- Non-Food Allergy - cocklebur
- Non-Food Allergy - Cockroach
- Non-Food Allergy - Cypress tree
- Non-Food Allergy - daisy
- Non-Food Allergy - dandelion pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - dust mites
- Non-Food Allergy - elm tree
- Non-Food Allergy - English plantain
- Non-Food Allergy - European Ash tree
- Non-Food Allergy - goosefoot
- Non-Food Allergy - grass
- Non-Food Allergy - guayule
- Non-Food Allergy - hazel tree
- Non-Food Allergy - hemp
- Non-Food Allergy - Hickory tree
- Non-Food Allergy - hop shrub
- Non-Food Allergy - Hornbeam tree
- Non-Food Allergy - horse chestnut tree
- Non-Food Allergy - Johnson grass
- Non-Food Allergy - Kentucky bluegrass
- Non-Food Allergy - maple tree
- Non-Food Allergy - Marsh Elder
- Non-Food Allergy - Monteroy pine tree
- Non-Food Allergy - mountain cedar tree
- Non-Food Allergy - mugwort tree
- Non-Food Allergy - nettle
- Non-Food Allergy - Oak tree
- Non-Food Allergy - Olea tree pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - olive tree
- Non-Food Allergy - Orache (Atriplex)
- Non-Food Allergy - orchard grass
- Non-Food Allergy - Patterson's curse
- Non-Food Allergy - Pecan trees
- Non-Food Allergy - pigweed
- Non-Food Allergy - plane tree
- Non-Food Allergy - plantago pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - poplar tree pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - ragweed
- Non-Food Allergy - Rapeseed oil
- Non-Food Allergy - redroot
- Non-Food Allergy - Redtop grass
- Non-Food Allergy - Ryegrass pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - sagebrush
- Non-Food Allergy - Sorrel
- Non-Food Allergy - Sunflower pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - sweet chestnut tree
- Non-Food Allergy - sweet vernal grass
- Non-Food Allergy - tilia tree pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - timothy grass
- Non-Food Allergy - tree pollen
- Non-Food Allergy - tumble weed (Russian thistle)
- Non-Food Allergy - Velvet grass
- Non-Food Allergy - wall pellitory
- Non-Food Allergy - walnut tree
- Non-Food Allergy - White cedar tree
- Non-Food Allergy - willow tree
- Non-Food Allergy - willow tree pollen
- Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
- Obesity associated asthma
- Occupational asthma
- Omsk hemorrhagic fever
- Opioid addiction
- Opium addiction
- Oropharyngeal cancer
- Oropharyngeal cancer, adult
- Orthomyxovirus-related Cold
- Oxycontin addiction
- OxyContin withdrawal
- Pain killer addiction
- Paprika splitter's lung
- Paprika splitter's lung - Mucor Stolonifer
- Paracoccidioidomycosis
- Parainfluenza
- Parainfluenza virus type 1
- Parainfluenza virus type 2
- Parainfluenza virus type 3
- Parainfluenza virus type 4
- Parakeet allergy
- Paramyxovirus -related Cold
- Paraseptal Emphysema
- Parrot allergy
- Parrot Breeder's disease
- Partial atrioventricular canal
- Paucigranulocytic asthma
- Pauli's hypersensitivity pneumonitis
- Peanut allergies
- Penicillin allergy
- Pericardial Mesothelioma
- Peripartum cardiomyopathy
- Pet allergy
- Pfiesteria piscicida infection
- Pfiesteria piscicida poisoning
- Pfiesteria poisoning
- Pfiesteria shumwayae poisoning
- Phosgene oxime - inhalation exposure
- Phosgene oxime exposure
- Pigeon allergy
- Pigeon Breeder's disease
- Plague
- Plant poisoning - Lobeline
- Pleural cancer
- Pleuropulmonary blastoma
- Pneumococcal pneumonia
- Pneumoconiosis
- Pneumocystosis
- Pneumonia
- Pneumonia caused by serotype O11 Pseudomonas Aeruginosa
- Pneumonia, eosinophilic
- Pneumonia, Viral
- Pneumonic plague
- Pneumonitis
- Pollen allergy
- Polymer Fume Fever
- Postoperative respiratory failure
- Postoperative septicaemia
- Prescribed medication addiction
- Primary Emphysema
- Psittacosis
- Pulmonary alveolar microlithiasis
- Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis
- Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, congenital
- Pulmonary cystic lymphangiectasis
- Pulmonary edema
- Pulmonary edema of mountaineers
- Pulmonary embolus
- Pulmonary fibrosis
- Pulmonary haemosiderosis, primary
- Pulmonary lymphangiectasia, congenital
- Pulmonary mucormycosis
- Pulmonary pseudolymphoma
- Pulmonary surfactant protein B, deficiency of
- Pulmonary valve stenosis
- Pulmonary venous hypertension
- Pulmonary zygomycosis
- Pulp Worker's disease
- Pulp Worker's disease - Alternaria spp.
- Recurring airway infection
- Reflux laryngitis
- Respiratory syncytial virus
- Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections
- Respiratory syncytial virus-related Cold
- Respiratory system cancer
- Respiratory-Bronchiolitis-associated Interstitial Lung Disease
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Rheumatoid vasculitis
- Rhinosporidiosis
- Rhinovirus infection
- Rhinovirus-related Cold
- Rodent allergy
- Roundworm
- Salicylate-sensitive asthma
- Sarcoidosis
- Sarcoidosis, pulmonary
- Schistosomiasis
- Sea nettle sting
- Seafood allergy
- Seasonal asthma
- Secondary Emphysema
- Severe heartburn
- Severe, refractory asthma
- Shock, anaphylactic
- Sick building syndrome
- Silent asthma
- Silicosiderosis
- Silicosis
- Silkworm dropping lung
- Silo unloader syndrome
- Sinusitis
- Slap-cheek syndrome
- Sleeping pill addiction
- Small Cell Lung Cancer
- Small cell lung cancer, adult
- Smith disease
- Smokers cough
- Smoking
- Sparrow allergy
- Sporotrichosis - pulmonary
- Spotted fevers
- Stachybotrys chartarum
- Steroid-dependant asthma
- Steroid-resistant asthma
- Steroid-resistant asthma, type I
- Steroid-resistant asthma, type II
- Steroid-sensitive asthma
- Stress incontinence
- Stridor
- Strongyloidiasis
- Suberosis
- Subphrenic abscess
- Supraglottic laryngeal cancer
- Swine flu
- Thatched Roof disease
- Thymic epithelial tumor
- Thyroid cancer, anaplastic
- Thyroid cancer, follicular
- Thyroid cancer, Hurthle cell
- Thyroid cancer, medullary
- Thyroid hormone plasma membrane transport defect
- Tobacco smoke associated asthma
- Tobacco Worker's disease
- Torulopsis
- Tourette Syndrome
- Toxic epidermal necrolysis
- Toxocariasis
- Tracheobronchopathia osteoplastica
- Tracheoesophageal fistula without esophageal atresia
- Tranquilizer addiction
- Tubatoxin poisoning
- Tuberculosis
- Tularemia
- Turkey allergy
- Type A Influenza
- Type A influenza subtype H1
- Type A influenza subtype H10N7
- Type A influenza subtype H1N1
- Type A influenza subtype H1N2
- Type A influenza subtype H2N2
- Type A influenza subtype H3N2
- Type A influenza subtype H5
- Type A influenza subtype H5N1
- Type A influenza subtype H7
- Type A influenza subtype H7N2
- Type A influenza subtype H7N3
- Type A influenza subtype H7N7
- Type A influenza subtype H9
- Type A influenza subtype H9N2
- Type B Influenza
- Type C Influenza
- Upper Respiratory Infection
- Urinary Incontinence
- Vanadium poisoning
- Vanadium toxicity
- Vasculitis hypersensitivity
- Ventricular septal defect
- Virus-induced asthma
- Weeping fig poisoning
- Wegener's granulomatosis
- Weil's syndrome
- Wheezing
- Whipple's Disease
- Whooping Cough
- Williams-Campbell syndrome
- Wine Grower's lung
- Wood trimmer's disease
- Woodworker's lung
- Woodworker's lung - Cedar dust
- Woodworker's lung - Mahogany dust
- Woodworker's lung - Maple dust
- Woodworker's lung - Oak dust
- Woodworker's lung - Pine dust
- Woodworker's lung - Spruce dust
- Worth syndrome
- X-linked agammaglobulinaemia
- Yellow nail syndrome
- Zinc poisoning
- Zygomycosis
Medications or substances causing Cough:
The following drugs, medications, substances or toxins are some of the possible
causes of Cough as a symptom.
This list is incomplete and various other drugs or substances
may cause your symptoms.
Always advise your doctor of any medications or treatments you are using,
including prescription, over-the-counter, supplements, herbal or alternative treatments.
See full list of 360
medications causing Cough
Drug interactions causing Cough:
When combined, certain drugs, medications, substances or toxins may react
causing Cough as a symptom.
The list below is incomplete and various other drugs or substances may cause your symptoms.
Always advise your doctor of any medications or treatments you are using,
including prescription, over-the-counter, supplements, herbal or alternative treatments.
- Trandolapril and capsaicin interaction
- Mavik and capsaicin interaction
- Tarka and capsaicin interaction
- Quinapril and capsaicin interaction
- Accupril and capsaicin interaction
- more interactions...»
See full list of 378
drug interactions causing Cough
Medical news summaries relating to Cough:
The following medical news items are relevant to causes of Cough:
Related information on causes of Cough:
As with all medical conditions,
there may be many causal factors.
Further relevant information on causes of Cough may be found in:
Causes of Cough: Online Medical Books
16 MEDICAL BOOKS ONLINE!
Review excerpts from medical books online, free, without registration,
for more information about the causes of Cough.
Hemoptysis:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
-
Other sources of bleeding (e.g., hematemesis, epistaxis, and other causes of upper airway bleeding)
-
Airway disease is the most common cause of hemoptysis
–Bronchitis (acute or chronic) causes more than 25% of cases
–Cancers (metastatic and primary lung
cancers) cause up to 25% of all cases
–Bronchiectasis causes up to 10% of cases
–Foreign body
–Trauma
-
Parenchymal disease
–Infections: Tuberculosis (5%), pneumonia (5%), lung abscess, aspergilloma
–Coagulopathy: Anticoagulant use,
thrombocytopenia, DIC
–Cystic fibrosis
–Inflammatory: SLE, Wegener’s
granulomatosis, Goodpasture's syndrome
–Iatrogenic: Transbronchial or percutaneous lung biopsy, bronchoscopy, intubation
–Cocaine use
- Cardiovascular disease
–Pulmonary infarction/embolism
–Congestive heart failure
–Mitral stenosis
–AVM
–Trauma to pulmonary artery (e.g., Swan-
Ganz catheterization)
–Aortic aneurysm
–Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome: Congenital
telangiectasias
-
Fistula formation between vasculature and airway
-
Catamenial hemoptysis (intrathoracic endometriosis): Cyclic bleeding with menses
-
Diffuse alveolar hemorrhage syndromes: ARDS, crack cocaine use, SLE, cytotoxic drug use
-
Inflammatory
–Behçet syndrome: Recurrent oral and genital ulcers, uveitis, and arthritis
–Henoch-Schönlein purpura: Most common systemic vasculitis in children; presents with palpable purpura, abdominal pain, hematuria, and arthritis
–Idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis - Idiopathic in 20% of cases
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Sore Throat:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
- Viral pharyngitis/laryngitis
–Most common cause of sore throat
–Associated with cough, low-grade fever,
nasal congestion, and sneezing
–Influenza occasionally causes sore throat
with high fever, cough, severe myalgias
–Rhino-, adeno-, coxsackie-, and herpesvirus
–Acute HIV infection
- Mononucleosis
–Associated with fever, headache, and
excessive fatigue
–Most common in teen and college ages
–May have associated lymphadenopathy,
splenomegaly, hepatitis, or encephalitis - Streptococcal pharyngitis
–May be associated with scarlatiniform rash, fever >101°F (>38.3°C), exudative pharyngitis, tender cervical lymphadenopathy, and absence of cough
–More common in winter months, ages 5–10, and with history of group A Streptococcus exposure
-
Allergic pharyngitis
-
Gonococcal pharyngitis
-
Fungal pharyngitis (e.g., Candida)
-
Foreign body in throat
–Most often occurs in smaller children
–Associated with sudden onset of audible
wheezing, stridor, drooling
-
GERD
-
Sore throat secondary to postnasal drip
-
Irritation secondary to inhalants (e.g., cigarette smoke), chemicals (e.g., alcohol), hot foods
-
Voice abuse (e.g., excessive screaming)
-
Deep neck space infections (e.g., retropharyngeal abscess, peritonsillar abscess, Ludwig's angina)
-
Epiglottitis/bacterial tracheitis
–Occurs in children ages 2–7 and
increasingly in adults
-
Diphtheria
-
Trauma
-
Lymphadenitis (cervical)
-
Cancer (e.g., tonsillar, tongue, laryngeal, esophageal)
-
Caustic ingestions
-
Thyroiditis
-
Angina/acute coronary syndrome
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Cough - Productive:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
- Postnasal drip (e.g., chronic sinusitis, allergic rhinitis)
–Most common cause of chronic cough in nonsmokers
- Acute bronchitis
–Most commonly caused by viruses (e.g., influenza, adenovirus, rhinovirus, RSV)
–Bacteria are much less common (e.g., Streptococcus pneumoniae, Mycoplasma, Haemophilus influenzae)
- Pneumonia
–May be community-acquired,
hospital-acquired, or due to aspiration
–“Typical” pneumonia (e.g., S. pneumoniae,
H. influenzae, influenza virus) has acute or subacute onset of fever, dyspnea, fatigue, pleuritic chest pain, and productive cough
–“Atypical” pneumonia (e.g., Mycoplasma, Legionella, Chlamydia, Pneumocystis carinii) has more gradual onset, dry cough, headache, fatigue
-
Smoker's cough
-
Lung cancer
–90% of cases due to smoking (other risk factors include radon, asbestos, pollutants)
-
Asthma with secondary infection
-
COPD (chronic bronchitis component)
-
Congestive heart failure
–Associated with “frothy” sputum
-
Tuberculosis
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Cough - Nonproductive:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
-
Smoker's cough
-
Postnasal drip (e.g., chronic sinusitis, allergic rhinitis)
–Most common cause of chronic cough in nonsmokers
-
GERD
–Second most common cause of chronic cough in nonsmokers
-
Asthma/reactive airway disease
–Classic triad of chronic cough, dyspnea, and wheezing
ACE inhibitor use Acute bronchitis
–Most commonly caused by viruses (e.g., influenza, adenovirus, rhinovirus, RSV)
–Postviral bronchitis may last beyond 6 weeks
Pneumonia
–“Typical” pneumonia (e.g., Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, or influenza/parainfluenza viruses) is characterized by acute or subacute onset of fever, dyspnea, fatigue, pleuritic chest pain, and cough
–“Atypical” pneumonia (e.g., Mycoplasma, Legionella, Chlamydia) is characterized by more gradual onset, dry cough, headache, fatigue, and minimal lung signs
Aspirated foreign body
–Abrupt onset of unilateral wheezing or stridor, cough, decreased breath sounds
–Leading cause of home accidental death in children younger than 6 (boys >girls)
-
Lung cancer
–90% of cases due to smoking (other risk factors include radon, asbestos, pollutants)
COPD (emphysematous variant)
Sarcoidosis
-
Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia
–Most commonly occurs following viral infection or exposure
Congestive heart failure
Filarial disease
Aspiration
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Stridor & Wheezing:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
Stridor (inspiratory)
- Croup (laryngotracheobronchitis)
–Viral infection with tracheal narrowing due
to airway edema
–“Bark-like” cough, hoarseness
- Epiglottitis
–Airway emergency most commonly due to Haemophilus influenzae or group A streptococcus infection
–Abrupt onset of high fevers, sore throat, hoarseness, dysphagia, respiratory distress
-
Foreign body lodged in the upper airway
-
Allergic reaction/anaphylaxis
–May have urticaria and angioedema (subcutaneous or mucosal swelling, often of the lips)
-
Trauma
-
Postendotracheal intubation
-
Psychogenic (e.g., paroxysmal vocal cord dyskinesia)
Stridor (expiratory)
-
COPD (expiratory vocalization to prolong time to airway closure and avoid air trapping)
-
Cardiac failure (expiratory vocalization to prolong increased intrathoracic pressure and unload left ventricle)
Wheezing
-
Asthma
–Triad of chronic cough, dyspnea, wheezing
–Wheezing may be absent in cases of severe
obstruction (insufficient air movement)
-
Pulmonary edema
–Leakage of fluid into the interstitium and alveoli due to elevated capillary pressure (cardiogenic) or abnormal capillary permeability (noncardiogenic)
COPD
GERD
Respiratory infection
–Upper respiratory infection
–Bronchiolitis
–“Atypical” pneumonia
-
Aspirated foreign body
–Abrupt onset of unilateral wheezing or stridor (if lodged in the upper airway), cough, and decreased breath sounds
Allergic reaction/anaphylaxis
–Urticaria, throat swelling (angioedema), and lip/tongue edema may be present
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Hemoptysis:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
-
Think anatomically and physiologically of why we bleed and the source of the blood
-
Upper airway
–Nose bleed
–Chronic sinus disease
–Postoperative bleeding
–Dental disease
–Trauma (including CNS)
-
Digestive tract
–Esophageal varices
–Gastric bleeding (unlikely to come from intestine; that is, distal to antrum)
–Oral ulcers/trauma
-
Lower airways
–Tracheobronchial tree bronchiectasis (e.g., with CF)
–Bronchial erosion (e.g., from tracheotomy tube)
–Wegener granulomatosis
-
Parenchyma
–Pulmonary hemorrhage
–Pulmonary tuberculosis
–Lung abscess
–Hemorrhagic fevers (rare in U.S.)
–Paragonimiasis (a trematode infection)
–Lung contusion from trauma
–Primary pulmonary hemosiderosis
–Swyer-James syndrome
-
Cardiovascular causes
–Pulmonary embolism
–Multiple pulmonary telangiectasia (e.g.,
Osler-Weber-Rendu)
–Ruptured arteriovenous fistula
–Mitral stenosis
-
Bleeding disorders (may present from any source)
–Hemophilia, leukemia, and other blood dyscrasias
–Increased consumption of coagulation factors (e.g., disseminated vascular coagulation)
-
The most common source of blood originating in the lower airways is from small bronchial lesions secondary to inflammation from infection
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Sore Throat:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
Infectious
–Viral
–Adenovirus
–Rhinovirus
–Parainfluenza
–Influenza
–Coronavirus
–Others: EBV RSV, CMV, HSV
–Bacterial
–Streptococcus
–Haemophilus
–Moraxella
–Staphylococcus
–Corynebacterium
–Fungal
–Candida
-
Inflammatory
–Allergy
–Gastroesophageal reflux disease
–Sinusitis resulting in postnasal drainage
-
Tumors
–Leukemia
–Rhabdosarcomas
–Squamous cell carcinoma secondary to oral
ulcerations
-
Trauma
–Foreign body ingestion
–Caustic ingestion
–Soft tissue injury from accidental and
nonaccidental trauma
-
Systemic/rheumatologic disorders
–Kawasaki disease: Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome may have sore throat at presentation (other oral findings include strawberry tongue, fissured lips, mucosal erythema, fever, and lymphadenopathy)
–Behçet syndrome
–Reiter syndrome
- Others
–Cigarette smoke
–Environmental pollutants
–Pharyngeal drying: Mouth and pharynx can
be dry from mouth breathing, more common in the winter months
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Stridor:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
Nasal cavity and nasopharynx
-
Congenital
–Piriform aperture stenosis
–Choanal atresia
–Lacrimal duct cyst
–Craniofacial anomaly
–Nasopharyngeal mass (teratoma)
-
Inflammatory/infectious
–Rhinosinusitis
–Adenoid hypertrophy
Oral cavity, oropharynx, and hypopharynx
-
Congenital
–Macroglossia
–Glossoptosis
–Vallecular cyst
-
Inflammatory/infectious
–Tonsillar hypertrophy
-
Tumors
–Lingual thyroid
–Dermoid
–Lymphovascular malformation
-
Foreign body
Laryngeal
- Congenital
–Laryngomalacia (#1 cause in infants); usual onset is in the first 2 weeks of life, typically positional; most resolve spontaneously by age 1
–Saccular cyst
–Webs
–Clefts
–Vocal cord paralysis
-
Inflammatory/infectious
–Epiglottitis
–Laryngotracheitis (croup)
–Gastroesophageal reflux
-
Tumors
–Papillomas
–Hemangiomas
-
Trauma
–Subglottic stenosis
–Foreign bodies
–Laryngeal fracture
–Caustic ingestion
Tracheobronchial
-
Congenital
–Tracheomalacia
–Vascular rings
–Tracheoesophageal fistula
-
Inflammatory
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Wheezing:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
Lower airway (expiratory, polyphonic)
- Extraluminal compression of airways
–Parenchymal: Pneumonia, pulmonary edema,
bronchogenic cyst
–Vascular: Ring, sling, “cardiac wheeze”
–Lymphatics: Enlarged lymph nodes (TB,
sarcoidosis, malignancy)
–Structural: CLE, scoliosis, or chest wall deformity with airway “kinking” - Transluminal change in airway
–Asthma: Inflammation, edema, hyperemia, mucus gland hypertrophy and proliferation, smooth muscle bronchospasm
–Bronchiectasis/bronchitis
–Cystic fibrosis
–Ciliary disease: Primary ciliary dyskinesia,
dysfunction due to ETS or hyperoxia
–Anatomic: Hemangioma, polyps, TEF, bronchial atresia, BALT, bronchiolitis obliterans, tracheobronchomalacia
–Immunologic disorders (e.g., IgA deficiency)
- Intraluminal change in airway
–Mucus (increased production or decreased
clearance), pus (infected sputum), blood
–Foreign body
–Aspirated food or stomach contents
secondary to gastroesophageal reflux
Upper airway (usually inspiratory and monophonic)
-
Nasal (congestion, choanal atresia, FB)
-
Oropharyngeal (tonsils, adenoids, macroglossia, foreign body, decreased tone, retropharyngeal abscess)
-
Laryngeal (laryngomalacia, vocal cord dysfunction or paralysis, laryngeal web or polyp, subglottic stenosis)
Central nervous system
-
Structural disease (e.g., Arnold-Chiari malformation leading to vocal cord paralysis)
-
Functional (e.g., vocal cord dysfunction, chronic aspiration)
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough – Acute:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
- Upper airway disease
–URI or common cold accounts for much pediatric coughing (influenza, parainfluenza, rhinovirus)
–Chronic sinusitis, tonsillitis, laryngitis, and
croup are other common infections
–Allergic disease
–Vocal cord dysfunction (VCD)
- Lower airway disease
–Asthma is inflammatory triad of edema, mucus, and bronchospasm, characterized by reversibility with asthma drugs (the most common triggers for asthma are viral disease, irritants such as ETS, allergic disease, and gastroesophageal reflux)
–Infectious diseases: Bronchiolitis, caused by RSV in babies, causes cough from inflammatory changes and debris; bronchitis is more common in older children and may be secondary to smoking or ETS exposure; other viral lower airway diseases include adenovirus, influenza, and parainfluenza
–Foreign body aspiration
–Chronic diseases (e.g., cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis) and structural abnormalities (e.g., PCD, TEF, or cleft, rings, and slings) may present with intermittent rather than chronic cough
- Parenchymal and pleural disease
–Infectious diseases account almost exclusively for all parenchymal and pleural causes of cough (i.e., pneumonia and empyema)
–Usual infectious agents include bacterial disease (e.g., streptococcal, staphylococcal) and atypical pneumonias (e.g., Mycoplasma pneumoniae), TB
–Irritation of a branch of cranial nerve ten in the external auditory canal can trigger cough
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough – Chronic:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
- Lower airway disease
–Asthma
–Inflammatory triad of edema, mucus, and bronchospasm, characterized by reversibility with asthma drugs
–The most common triggers for asthma are viral disease, irritants (e.g., ETS), allergic disease, and GER
–Airway infections: Bronchiolitis, caused by RSV in babies, may cause chronic cough from persistent inflammatory change and debris; bronchitis is more common in older children and may be secondary to smoking or ETS exposure
–Foreign body: Associated with endobronchial infection and damage
–Cystic fibrosis: The most common life-threatening inherited illness of whites, is associated with production of chronically infected sputum
–Bronchiectasis: Chronic infection and damage to the airway; may be secondary to another disease (e.g., TB or CF)
–Structural abnormalities: PCD, TEF, or cleft, rings, slings
-
Upper airway disease
–Infectious diseases: Chronic sinusitis, tonsillitis, laryngitis, including that secondary to GER (although acute disorders, the inflammation from URI may be associated with a chronic cough if frequent enough)
-
Parenchymal and pleural disease
–Infectious disease accounts almost exclusively for all parenchymal and pleural causes of cough (e.g., pneumonia and empyema)
- CNS causes
–CNS causes of cough include “habit cough” (or psychogenic cough), Tourette disease associated “cough tic” or throat clearing, VCD
–Irritation of a branch of cranial nerve ten in the external auditory canal can trigger chronic cough
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Hemoptysis:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Bronchial adenoma
Bronchial adenoma is an insidious disorder that causes recurring hemoptysis in up to 30% of patients, along with a chronic cough and local wheezing.
Bronchiectasis
Inflamed bronchial surfaces and eroded bronchial blood vessels cause hemoptysis, which can vary from blood-tinged sputum to blood (in about 20% of cases) The patient’s sputum may also be copious, foul-smelling, and purulent
He may exhibit a chronic cough, coarse crackles, clubbing (a late sign), a fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, malaise, and dyspnea on exertion.
Bronchitis (chronic)
The first sign of chronic bronchitis is typically a productive cough that lasts at least 3 months Eventually this leads to the production of blood-streaked sputum; massive hemorrhage is unusual
Other respiratory effects include dyspnea, prolonged expirations, wheezing, scattered rhonchi, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, and clubbing (a late sign).
Coagulation disorders
Such disorders as thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation can cause hemoptysis Besides their specific related findings, these disorders may share such general signs as multisystem hemorrhaging (for example, GI bleeding or epistaxis) and purpuric lesions.
Lung abscess
In about 50% of patients, lung abscess produces blood-streaked sputum resulting from bronchial ulceration, necrosis, and granulation tissue Common associated findings include a cough with large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling sputum; a fever with chills; diaphoresis; anorexia; weight loss; a headache; weakness; dyspnea; pleuritic or dull chest pain; and clubbing
Auscultation reveals tubular or cavernous breath sounds and crackles. Percussion reveals dullness on the affected side.
Lung cancer
Ulceration of the bronchus commonly causes recurring hemoptysis (an early sign), which can vary from blood-streaked sputum to blood Related findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, a fever, anorexia, weight loss, wheezing, and chest pain (a late symptom).
Plague (Yersinia pestis)
The pneumonic form of this acute bacterial infection can produce hemoptysis, a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency, along with the sudden onset of chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia.
Pneumonia
In up to 50% of cases, Klebsiella pneumonia produces dark brown or red (currant jelly) sputum, which is so tenacious that the patient has difficulty expelling it from his mouth This type of pneumonia begins abruptly with chills, a fever, dyspnea, a productive cough, and severe pleuritic chest pain
Associated findings may include cyanosis, prostration, tachycardia, decreased breath sounds, and crackles.
Pneumococcal pneumonia causes pinkish or rusty mucoid sputum. It begins with sudden, shaking chills; a rapidly rising temperature; and, in over 80% of cases, tachycardia and tachypnea. Within a few hours, the patient typically experiences a productive cough along with severe, stabbing, pleuritic pain. The agonizing chest pain leads to rapid, shallow, grunting respirations with splinting. Examination reveals respiratory distress with dyspnea and accessory muscle use, crackles, and dullness on percussion over the affected lung. Malaise, weakness, myalgia, and prostration accompany a high fever.
Pulmonary edema
Severe cardiogenic or noncardiogenic pulmonary edema commonly causes frothy, blood-tinged pink sputum, which accompanies severe dyspnea, orthopnea, gasping, anxiety, cyanosis, diffuse crackles, a ventricular gallop, and cold, clammy skin This life-threatening condition may also cause tachycardia, lethargy, cardiac arrhythmias, tachypnea, hypotension, and a thready pulse.
Pulmonary embolism with infarction
Hemoptysis is a common finding in pulmonary embolism with infarction, a life-threatening disorder, although massive hemoptysis is infrequent Typical initial symptoms are dyspnea and anginal or pleuritic chest pain
Other common clinical features include tachycardia, tachypnea, a low-grade fever, and diaphoresis. Less commonly, splinting of the chest, leg edema, and — with a large embolus — cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention may occur. Examination reveals decreased breath sounds, a pleural friction rub, crackles, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and signs of circulatory collapse (a weak, rapid pulse; hypotension), cerebral ischemia (transient loss of consciousness, convulsions), and hypoxemia (restlessness and, particularly in elderly patients, hemiplegia and other focal neurologic deficits).
Pulmonary hypertension (primary)
Features generally develop late Hemoptysis, exertional dyspnea, and fatigue are common
Angina-like pain usually occurs with exertion and may radiate to the neck but not to the arms. Other findings include arrhythmias, syncope, a cough, and hoarseness.
Pulmonary TB
Blood-streaked or blood-tinged sputum commonly occurs in pulmonary TB; massive hemoptysis may occur in advanced cavitary TB
Accompanying respiratory findings include a chronic productive cough, fine crackles after coughing, dyspnea, dullness on percussion, increased tactile fremitus, and possible amphoric breath sounds. The patient may also develop night sweats, malaise, fatigue, a fever, anorexia, weight loss, and pleuritic chest pain.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
In 50% of patients with SLE, pleuritis and pneumonitis cause hemoptysis, a cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and crackles
Related findings are a butterfly rash in the acute phase, nondeforming joint pain and stiffness, photosensitivity, Raynaud’s phenomenon, seizures or psychoses, anorexia with weight loss, and lymphadenopathy.
Tracheal trauma
Torn tracheal mucosa may cause hemoptysis, hoarseness, dysphagia, neck pain, airway occlusion, and respiratory distress.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Lung or airway injury from bronchoscopy, laryngoscopy, mediastinoscopy, or lung biopsy can cause bleeding and hemoptysis.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Stridor:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Airway trauma
Local trauma to the upper airway commonly causes acute obstruction, resulting in the sudden onset of stridor. Accompanying this sign are dysphonia, dysphagia, hemoptysis, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachypnea, progressive dyspnea, and shallow respirations. Palpation may reveal subcutaneous crepitation in the neck or upper chest.
Anaphylaxis
With a severe allergic reaction, upper airway edema and laryngospasm cause stridor and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress: nasal flaring, wheezing, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and dyspnea. The patient may also develop nasal congestion and profuse, watery rhinorrhea. Typically, these respiratory effects are preceded by a feeling of impending doom or fear, weakness, diaphoresis, sneezing, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Common associated findings include chest or throat tightness, dysphagia and, possibly, signs of shock, such as hypotension, tachycardia, and cool, clammy skin.
Anthrax (inhalation)
Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include a fever, chills, weakness, a cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by stridor, a fever, dyspnea, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Sudden stridor is characteristic in foreign body aspiration, a life-threatening situation. Related findings include an abrupt onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing; gagging or choking; hoarseness; tachycardia; wheezing; dyspnea; tachypnea; intercostal muscle retractions; diminished breath sounds; cyanosis; and shallow respirations. The patient typically appears anxious and distressed.
Hypocalcemia
With hypocalcemia, laryngospasm can cause stridor. Other findings include paresthesia, carpopedal spasm, and positive Chvostek’s and Trousseau’s signs.
Inhalation injury
Within 48 hours after inhalation of smoke or noxious fumes, the patient may develop laryngeal edema and bronchospasms, resulting in stridor. Associated signs and symptoms include singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, coughing, hoarseness, sooty sputum, crackles, rhonchi, wheezes, and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress, such as dyspnea, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and nasal flaring.
Mediastinal tumor
Commonly producing no symptoms at first, a mediastinal tumor may eventually compress the trachea and bronchi, resulting in stridor. Its other effects include hoarseness, a brassy cough, a tracheal shift or tug, dilated neck veins, swelling of the face and neck, stertorous respirations, and suprasternal retractions on inspiration. The patient may also report dyspnea, dysphagia, and pain in the chest, shoulder, or arm.
Retrosternal thyroid
Retrosternal thyroid is an anatomic abnormality that causes stridor, dysphagia, a cough, hoarseness, and tracheal deviation. It can also cause signs of thyrotoxicosis.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Bronchoscopy or laryngoscopy may precipitate laryngospasm and stridor.
Treatments
After prolonged intubation, the patient may exhibit laryngeal edema and stridor when the tube is removed. Aerosol therapy with epinephrine may reduce stridor. Reintubation may be necessary in some cases. Neck surgery, such as thyroidectomy, may cause laryngeal paralysis and stridor.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Actinomycosis.
Actinomycosis begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. A fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
Aspiration pneumonitis.
Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy and, possibly, purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, a fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
Bronchiectasis.
The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis; his sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, a recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis (chronic).
Bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis.
Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, a fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Common cold.
When the common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications include a dry hacking cough, sneezing, a headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious, mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, a sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Lung abscess (ruptured).
The cardinal sign of a ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, and possibly blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, a fever with chills, dyspnea, a headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
Lung cancer.
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, a fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Nocardiosis.
Nocardiosis causes a productive cough (with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum) and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, malaise, fatigue, weight loss, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion.
North American blastomycosis.
North American blastomycosis is a chronic disorder that produces coughing that's dry and hacking or produces bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, a fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Plague
(Yersinia pestis). Plague is one of the most virulent acute bacterial infections and, if untreated, one of the most potentially lethal diseases known. Most cases are sporadic, but the potential for epidemic spread still exists. Clinical forms include bubonic (the most common), septicemic, and pneumonic plagues. The bubonic form is transmitted to a human when bitten by an infected flea. Signs and symptoms include a fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the flea bite. Septicemic plague develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form may be contracted from person-to-person through direct contact via the respiratory system or through biological warfare from aerosolization and inhalation of the organism. The onset is usually sudden with chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia.
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, a high fever, myalgia, a headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Mycoplasma pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. Typically, however, a nonproductive cough starts 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, a fever, and a sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles, but generally don't appear seriously ill.
Psittacosis.
As psittacosis progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly, with chills, a fever, a headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe infection may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with a fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, a sore throat, a headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
Pulmonary edema.
When severe, pulmonary edema, which is a life-threatening disorder, causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea; paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea; and coughing, which may be nonproductive initially. Others include a fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a ventricular gallop. As the patient's respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and a productive cough, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism.
Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less-common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB).
Pulmonary TB causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis.
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Tracheobronchitis.
Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later — following the onset of chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness — becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests (PFTs) may increase productive coughing.
Drugs.
Expectorants increase productive coughing. These include ammonium chloride, calcium iodide, guaifenesin, iodinated glycerol, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Respiratory therapy.
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Aspiration of foreign body.
Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, and then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis.
Epiglottiditis is a life-threatening disorder that has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute).
Also known as viral croup, laryngotracheobronchitis is most common in children between ages 9 and 18 months and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces a low to moderate fever, a runny nose, a poor appetite, and an infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, a barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Spasmodic croup.
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn't have a fever, but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Airway occlusion.
Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient is gagging, wheezing, and hoarse, with stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds.
Anthrax (inhalation).
Anthrax is an acute infectious disease that's caused by the gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Although the disease most commonly occurs in wild and domestic grazing animals, such as cattle, sheep, and goats, the spores can live in the soil for many years. The disease can occur in humans exposed to infected animals, tissue from infected animals, or biological warfare. Most natural cases occur in agricultural regions worldwide. Anthrax may occur in the cutaneous, inhalation, or GI form.
Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhaling aerosolized spores. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include a fever, chills, weakness, a cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages, with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by a fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic).
Aortic aneurysm causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, jugular vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor and, possibly, paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma.
Asthma attacks typically occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing; this progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Atelectasis.
As lung tissue deflates, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, and tachycardia. His skin may be cyanotic and diaphoretic, his breath sounds may be decreased, his chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
Bronchitis (chronic).
Bronchitis starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
Bronchogenic carcinoma.
The earliest indicators of bronchogenic carcinoma can be a chronic, nonproductive cough; dyspnea; and vague chest pain. The patient may also be wheezing.
Common cold.
The common cold generally starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progresses to some mix of sneezing, headaches, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea, myalgia, arthralgia, nasal congestion, and a sore throat.
Esophageal achalasia.
In esophageal achalasia, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough. The patient may also have recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia.
Esophageal diverticula.
The patient with esophageal diverticula has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
Esophageal occlusion.
Esophageal occlusion is marked by immediate nonproductive coughing and gagging, with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain, dysphagia, and the inability to swallow.
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.
A nonproductive cough is common in patients with Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, which is marked by noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. Other findings include a headache, myalgia, fever, nausea, and vomiting.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis.
With hypersensitivity pneumonitis, an acute nonproductive cough, a fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 to 6 hours after exposure to an antigen.
Interstitial lung disease.
A patient with interstitial lung disease has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss.
Laryngeal tumor.
A mild, nonproductive cough is an early sign of a laryngeal tumor, in addition to minor throat discomfort and hoarseness. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and an earache may occur.
Laryngitis.
In its acute form, laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient is swallowing or speaking) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
Lung abscess.
Lung abscess typically begins with a nonproductive cough, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, a fever, a headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, and possibly bloody sputum.
Pleural effusion.
A nonproductive cough along with dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include a pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Pneumonia.
Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, a headache, a high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient's chest may be dull on percussion.
With mycoplasma pneumonia, a nonproductive cough arises 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, and a sore throat. The cough can be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. Fever commonly occurs, but the patient doesn't appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and a low-grade fever.
Pneumothorax.
Pneumothorax is a life-threatening disorder that causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
Pulmonary edema.
Pulmonary edema initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a ventricular gallop. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient's respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and coughing that produces frothy, bloody sputum.
Pulmonary embolism.
A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough along with dyspnea and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. Typically, however, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and a low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
Sarcoidosis.
With sarcoidosis, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, visual impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
SARS is an acute infectious disease of unknown etiology; however, a novel coronavirus has been implicated as a possible cause. Although most cases have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), cases have cropped up in Europe and North America. The incubation period is 2 to 7 days; the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include a headache; malaise; a dry, nonproductive cough; and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Tracheobronchitis (acute).
Initially, tracheobronchitis produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough's onset. Rhonchi and wheezes are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and possibly bronchospasm, with severe wheezing and increased coughing.
Tularemia.
Also known as rabbit fever, tularemia is caused by the gram-negative, non–spore-forming bacterium Francisella tularensis. It's typically a rural disease found in wild animals, water, and moist soil. It's transmitted to humans through the bite of an infected insect or tick, handling infected animal carcasses, drinking contaminated water, or inhaling the bacteria. It's considered a possible airborne agent for biological warfare. Signs and symptoms following inhalation of the organism include the abrupt onset of a fever, chills, a headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.
Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors and trigger coughing.
Treatments.
Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Wheezing [Sibilant rhonchi]:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Anaphylaxis
Anaphylaxis is an allergic reaction that can cause tracheal edema or bronchospasm, resulting in severe wheezing and stridor. Initial signs and symptoms include fright, weakness, sneezing, dyspnea, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Respiratory distress occurs with nasal flaring, accessory muscle use, and intercostal retractions. Other findings include nasal edema and congestion; profuse, watery rhinorrhea; chest or throat tightness; and dysphagia. Cardiac effects include arrhythmias and hypotension.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Partial obstruction by a foreign body produces sudden onset of wheezing and possibly stridor; a dry, paroxysmal cough; gagging; and hoarseness. Other findings include tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds and, possibly, cyanosis. A retained foreign body may cause inflammation leading to fever, pain, and swelling.
Aspiration pneumonitis
With aspiration pneumonitis, wheezing may accompany tachypnea, marked dyspnea, cyanosis, tachycardia, fever, productive (eventually purulent) cough, and pink, frothy sputum.
Asthma
Wheezing is an initial and cardinal sign of asthma. It’s heard at the mouth during expiration. An initially dry cough later becomes productive with thick mucus. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expiration, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions, rhonchi, accessory muscle use, nasal flaring, and tachypnea. Asthma also produces tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Bronchial adenoma
Bronchial adenoma, an insidious disorder, produces unilateral, possibly severe wheezing. Common features are chronic cough and recurring hemoptysis. Symptoms of airway obstruction may occur later.
Bronchiectasis
Excessive mucus commonly causes intermittent and localized or diffuse wheezing. A copious, foul-smelling, mucopurulent cough is classic. It’s accompanied by hemoptysis, rhonchi, and coarse crackles. Weight loss, fatigue, weakness, exertional dyspnea, fever, malaise, halitosis, and late-stage clubbing may also occur.
Bronchitis (chronic)
Bronchitis causes wheezing that varies in severity, location, and intensity. Associated findings include prolonged expiration, coarse crackles, scattered rhonchi, and a hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other effects include dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, clubbing, edema, weight gain, and cyanosis.
Bronchogenic carcinoma
Obstruction may cause localized wheezing. Typical findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis (initially blood-tinged sputum, possibly leading to massive hemorrhage), anorexia, and weight loss. Upper extremity edema and chest pain may also occur.
Emphysema
Mild to moderate wheezing may occur with emphysema, a form of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Related findings include dyspnea, malaise, tachypnea, diminished breath sounds, peripheral cyanosis, pursed-lip breathing, anorexia, and malaise. Accessory muscle use, barrel chest, a chronic productive cough, and clubbing may also occur.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis may cause wheezing and rhonchi along with cough, fever, chills, pleuritic chest pain, headache, weakness, malaise, anorexia, and macular rash.
Pulmonary edema
Wheezing may occur with pulmonary edema, a life-threatening disorder. Other signs and symptoms include coughing, exertional and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea and, later, orthopnea. Examination reveals tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a diastolic gallop. Severe pulmonary edema produces rapid, labored respirations; diffuse crackles; a productive cough with frothy, bloody sputum; arrhythmias; cold, clammy, cyanotic skin; hypotension; and thready pulse.
Tracheobronchitis
Auscultation may detect wheezing, rhonchi, and crackles. The patient also has a cough, slight fever, sudden chills, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness.
Wegener’s granulomatosis
Wegener’s granulomatosis may cause mild to moderate wheezing if it compresses major airways. Other findings include a cough (possibly bloody), dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, hemorrhagic skin lesions, and progressive renal failure. Epistaxis and severe sinusitis are common.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Whooping cough:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Whooping cough is usually transmitted by the direct inhalation of contaminated droplets from a patient in the acute stage; it may also be spread indirectly through soiled linen and other articles contaminated by respiratory secretions.
Whooping cough is endemic throughout the world, usually occurring in late winter and early spring. In about 50% of cases, it strikes unimmunized children younger than age 1, because the immunization series hasn’t been completed and the child has had contact with an adult harboring the organisms.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Hemoptysis:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Aortic aneurysm (ruptured)
Rarely, an aortic aneurysm ruptures into the tracheobronchial tree, causing hemoptysis and sudden death.
Blast lung injury
Although individuals with this type of injury may not have obvious external chest injuries, they sometimes show other indications of internal damage, such as hemoptysis. Health care providers should evaluate survivors of explosive detonations for other classic signs and symptoms of a blast lung injury, such as chest pain, cyanosis, dyspnea, and wheezing. Treatment includes careful administration of fluids and oxygen to ensure tissue perfusion.
Bronchial adenoma
This insidious disorder causes recurring hemoptysis in up to 30% of patients along with a chronic cough and local wheezing.
Bronchiectasis
Inflamed bronchial surfaces and eroded bronchial blood vessels cause hemoptysis, which can vary from blood-tinged sputum to blood (in about 20% of patients). The patient typically has a chronic cough producing copious amounts of foul-smelling, purulent sputum. He may also exhibit coarse crackles, clubbing (a late sign), fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, malaise, and dyspnea on exertion.
Bronchitis (chronic)
The first sign of this disorder is typically a productive cough that lasts at least 3 months. Eventually this leads to production of blood-streaked sputum; massive hemorrhage is unusual. Other respiratory effects include dyspnea, prolonged expirations, wheezing, scattered rhonchi, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, and clubbing (a late sign).
Coagulation disorders
Such disorders as thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation can cause hemoptysis, multisystem hemorrhaging (for example, GI bleeding or epistaxis), and purpuric lesions.
Laryngeal cancer
Hemoptysis occurs in this cancer, but hoarseness is usually the initial sign. Other findings may include dysphagia, dyspnea, stridor, cervical lymphadenopathy, and neck pain.
Lung abscess
In about 50% of patients, this disorder produces blood-streaked sputum resulting from bronchial ulceration, necrosis, and granulation tissue. Common associated findings include a cough producing large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling sputum; fever with chills; diaphoresis; anorexia; weight loss; headache; weakness; dyspnea; pleuritic or dull chest pain; and clubbing. Auscultation reveals tubular or cavernous breath sounds and crackles. Percussion reveals dullness on the affected side.
Lung cancer
Ulceration of the bronchus commonly causes recurring hemoptysis (an early sign), which can vary from blood-streaked sputum to blood. Related findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, fever, anorexia, weight loss, wheezing, and chest pain (a late symptom).
Plague
The pneumonic form of this acute bacterial infection, caused by Yersinia pestis, can produce hemoptysis, a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency. Pneumonic plague begins abruptly with chills, fever, headache, and myalgia.
Pneumonia
In up to 50% of patients, Klebsiella pneumonia produces dark brown or red (currant-jelly) sputum, which is so tenacious that the patient has difficulty expelling it from his mouth. This type of pneumonia begins abruptly with chills, fever, dyspnea, a productive cough, and severe pleuritic chest pain. Associated findings may include cyanosis, prostration, tachycardia, decreased breath sounds, and crackles.
Pneumococcal pneumonia causes pinkish or rusty mucoid sputum. It begins with sudden shaking chills; a rapidly rising temperature; and, in over 80% of patients, tachycardia and tachypnea. Within a few hours, the patient typically experiences a productive cough along with severe, stabbing, pleuritic pain that leads to rapid, shallow, grunting respirations with splinting. Examination reveals respiratory distress with dyspnea and accessory muscle use, crackles, and dullness on percussion over the affected lung. Malaise, weakness, myalgia, and prostration accompany a high fever.
Pulmonary arteriovenous fistula
Occurring in young adults, this genetic disorder causes intermittent hemoptysis along with cyanosis, clubbing, mild dyspnea, fatigue, vertigo, syncope, confusion, and speech and visual impairments. The patient may bleed from the nose, mouth, or lips. Ruby red patches appear on the face, tongue, skin, mucous membranes, or nail beds.
Pulmonary contusion
Blunt chest trauma commonly causes a cough with hemoptysis. Other signs and symptoms that appear over several hours include dyspnea, tachypnea, chest pain, tachycardia, hypotension, crackles, and decreased or absent breath sounds over the affected area. Severe respiratory distress—with oppressive dyspnea, nasal flaring, use of accessory muscles, extreme anxiety, cyanosis, and diaphoresis—may develop at any time.
Pulmonary edema
Severe cardiogenic or noncardiogenic pulmonary edema commonly causes frothy, blood-tinged pink sputum, which accompanies severe dyspnea, orthopnea, gasping, anxiety, cyanosis, diffuse crackles, a ventricular gallop, and cold, clammy skin. This life-threatening condition may also cause tachycardia, lethargy, cardiac arrhythmias, tachypnea, hypotension, and a thready pulse.
Pulmonary embolism with infarction
Hemoptysis is a common finding in this life-threatening disorder, although massive hemoptysis is rare. Typical initial symptoms are dyspnea and anginal or pleuritic chest pain. Other common clinical features include tachycardia, tachypnea, low-grade fever, and diaphoresis. Less common features include splinting of the chest, leg edema, and—with a large embolus—cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. Examination reveals decreased breath sounds, pleural friction rub, crackles, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and signs of circulatory collapse (weak, rapid pulse and hypotension), cerebral ischemia (transient loss of consciousness and seizures), and hypoxemia (restlessness and, particularly in elderly patients, hemiplegia and other focal neurologic deficits).
Pulmonary hypertension (primary)
Hemoptysis, exertional dyspnea, and fatigue generally develop late in this disorder. Angina-like pain usually occurs with exertion and may radiate to the neck but not to the arms. Other findings include arrhythmias, syncope, cough, and hoarseness.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
Blood-streaked or blood-tinged sputum commonly occurs in this disorder; massive hemoptysis may occur in advanced cavitary tuberculosis. Accompanying respiratory findings include a chronic productive cough, fine crackles after coughing, dyspnea, dullness on percussion, increased tactile fremitus and, possibly, amphoric breath sounds. The patient may also develop night sweats, malaise, fatigue, fever, anorexia, weight loss, and pleuritic chest pain.
Silicosis
This chronic disorder causes a productive cough with mucopurulent sputum that later becomes blood streaked. Occasionally, massive hemoptysis may occur. Other findings include fine end-inspiratory crackles at lung bases, exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, and weakness.
Systemic lupus erythematosus
In 50% of patients with this disorder, pleuritis and pneumonitis cause hemoptysis, a cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and crackles. Related findings are a butterfly rash in the acute phase, nondeforming joint pain and stiffness, photosensitivity, Raynaud’s phenomenon, seizures or psychoses, anorexia with weight loss, and lymphadenopathy.
Tracheal trauma
Torn tracheal mucosa may cause hemoptysis, hoarseness, dysphagia, neck pain, airway occlusion, and respiratory distress.
Wegener’s granulomatosis
Necrotizing, granulomatous vasculitis characterizes this multisystem disorder. Findings include hemoptysis, chest pain, cough, wheezing, dyspnea, epistaxis, severe sinusitis, and hemorrhagic skin lesions.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Lung or airway injury from bronchoscopy, laryngoscopy, mediastinoscopy, or lung biopsy can cause bleeding and hemoptysis.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Stridor:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Airway trauma
Local trauma to the upper airway commonly causes acute obstruction, resulting in the sudden onset of stridor. Accompanying this sign are dysphonia, dysphagia, hemoptysis, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachypnea, progressive dyspnea, and shallow respirations. Palpation may reveal subcutaneous crepitation in the neck or upper chest.
Anaphylaxis
With a severe allergic reaction, upper airway edema and laryngospasm cause stridor and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress: nasal flaring, wheezing, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and dyspnea. The patient may also develop nasal congestion and profuse, watery rhinorrhea. Typically, these respiratory effects are preceded by a feeling of impending doom or fear, weakness, diaphoresis, sneezing, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Common associated findings include chest or throat tightness, dysphagia and, possibly, signs of shock, such as hypotension, tachycardia, and cool, clammy skin.
Anthrax, inhalation
Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by stridor, fever, dyspnea, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Sudden stridor is characteristic in this life-threatening situation. Related findings include abrupt onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing, gagging or choking, hoarseness, tachycardia, wheezing, dyspnea, tachypnea, intercostal muscle retractions, diminished breath sounds, cyanosis, and shallow respirations. The patient typically appears anxious and distressed.
Epiglottiditis
With this inflammatory condition, stridor is caused by an erythematous, edematous epiglottis that obstructs the upper airway. Stridor occurs along with fever, sore throat, and a croupy cough.
Hypocalcemia
With this disorder, laryngospasm can cause stridor. Other findings include paresthesia, carpopedal spasm, and positive Chvostek’s and Trousseau’s signs.
Inhalation injury
Within 48 hours after inhalation of smoke or noxious fumes, the patient may develop laryngeal edema and bronchospasms, resulting in stridor. Associated signs and symptoms include singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, coughing, hoarseness, sooty sputum, crackles, rhonchi, wheezes, and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress, such as dyspnea, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and nasal flaring.
Laryngeal tumor
Stridor is a late sign and may be accompanied by dysphagia, dyspnea, enlarged cervical nodes, and pain that radiates to the ear. Typically, stridor is preceded by hoarseness, minor throat pain, and a mild, dry cough.
Laryngitis (acute)
This disorder may cause severe laryngeal edema, resulting in stridor and dyspnea. Its chief sign, however, is mild to severe hoarseness, perhaps with transient voice loss. Other findings include sore throat, dysphagia, dry cough, malaise, and fever.
Mediastinal tumor
Commonly producing no symptoms at first, this type of tumor may eventually compress the trachea and bronchi, resulting in stridor. Its other effects include hoarseness, brassy cough, tracheal shift or tug, dilated neck veins, swelling of the face and neck, stertorous respirations, and suprasternal retractions on inspiration. The patient may also report dyspnea, dysphagia, and pain in the chest, shoulder, or arm.
Retrosternal thyroid
This anatomic abnormality causes stridor, dysphagia, cough, hoarseness, and tracheal deviation. It can also cause signs of thyrotoxicosis.
Thoracic aortic aneurysm
If this aneurysm compresses the trachea, it may cause stridor accompanied by dyspnea, wheezing, and a brassy cough. Other findings include hoarseness or complete voice loss, dysphagia, jugular vein distention, prominent chest veins, tracheal tug, paresthesia or neuralgia, and edema of the face, neck, and arms. The patient may also complain of substernal, lower back, abdominal, or shoulder pain.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Bronchoscopy or laryngoscopy may precipitate laryngospasm and stridor.
Treatments
After prolonged intubation, the patient may exhibit laryngeal edema and stridor when the tube is removed. Aerosol therapy with epinephrine may reduce stridor. Reintubation may be necessary in some cases. Neck surgery, such as thyroidectomy, may cause laryngeal paralysis and stridor.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Actinomycosis
This disorder begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. Fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
Aspiration pneumonitis
This disorder causes coughing that produces pink, frothy, possibly purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
Asthma (acute)
A severe asthma attack, which can be life-threatening, may produce tenacious mucoid sputum and mucus plugs. Such an attack typically starts with a dry cough and mild wheezing, then progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a productive cough. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expiration, intercostal and supraclavicular retraction on inspiration, accessory muscle use, rhonchi, crackles, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis. Attacks commonly occur at night or during sleep.
Bronchiectasis
The chronic cough of this disorder produces copious mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis: His sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis (chronic)
The cough associated with chronic bronchitis may be nonproductive initially; eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood tinged and foul smelling. The cough, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expiration, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis
This disorder causes a cough with purulent sputum. It may also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, fever, malaise, crackles, laryngitis, rhinitis, and mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; in severe pneumonitis, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Common cold
The common cold may cause a productive cough with mucoid or mucopurulent sputum, but it usually starts with a dry, hacking cough, sore throat, sneezing, rhinorrhea, and nasal congestion. Headache, malaise, fatigue, myalgia, and arthralgia may also occur.
Emphysema
This disorder causes a chronic productive cough with scant mucoid, translucent, grayish white sputum that can become mucopurulent. Patients with emphysema are typically thin and have the characteristic pink or red complexion (“pink puffer” appearance). They may also exhibit increased accessory muscle use, tachypnea, grunting expirations through pursed lips, diminished breath sounds, exertional dyspnea, rhonchi, barrel chest, anorexia, and weight loss. Clubbing is a late sign.
Legionnaires’ disease
This disorder causes a cough that produces scant mucoid, nonpurulent and, possibly, blood-streaked sputum. Prodromal signs and symptoms typically include malaise, fatigue, weakness, anorexia, diffuse myalgia, and possibly diarrhea. Within 12 to 48 hours, the patient develops a dry cough and a sudden high fever with chills. Many patients also have pleuritic chest pain, headache, tachypnea, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, crackles, mild temporary amnesia, disorientation, confusion, flushing, mild diaphoresis, and prostration.
Lung abscess (ruptured)
The cardinal sign of a ruptured lung abscess is a cough that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, fever with chills, dyspnea, headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
Lung cancer
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms of lung cancer include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Nocardiosis
This disorder causes a productive cough (with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum) and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion.
North American blastomycosis
This chronic disorder may produce a dry hacking cough or a productive cough with bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Plague
Caused by Yersinia pestis, plague is one of the most virulent and, if untreated, most lethal bacterial infections known. Most cases are sporadic, but the potential for epidemic spread still exists. Clinical forms include bubonic (the most common), septicemic, and pneumonic plagues. The bubonic form is transmitted to man from the bite of infected fleas. Signs and symptoms include fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the fleabite. Septicemic plague may develop as a complication of untreated bubonic or pneumonic plague and occurs when plague bacteria enter the bloodstream and multiply. The pneumonic form can be contracted by inhaling respiratory droplets from an infected person or inhaling the organism that has been dispersed in the air through biological warfare. The onset is usually sudden with chills, fever, headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Mycoplasmal pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. In most cases, however, a nonproductive cough starts 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, fever, and sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles but generally don’t appear seriously ill.
Psittacosis
As this disorder progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly with chills, fever, headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe psittacosis may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis
This disorder causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, sore throat, headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
Pulmonary edema
When severe, this life-threatening disorder causes a cough that produces frothy, blood-tinged sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea followed by orthopnea, and a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop may also occur. As the patient’s respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and the productive cough, worsening tachycardia, and possibly arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism
This life-threatening disorder causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, in a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended jugular veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
This disorder causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may exhibit chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of this disorder. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Tracheobronchitis
Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough followed by chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness. As secretions increase, the cough produces mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent sputum. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezing; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests may increase productive coughing.
Drugs
Expectorants, such as ammonium chloride, guaifenesin, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate, increase productive coughing.
Respiratory therapy
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Aspiration of foreign body
Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing, and possibly cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis
This life-threatening disorder has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute)
Also known as viral croup, this infection is most common in children between ages 9 and 18 months and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces low to moderate fever, runny nose, poor appetite, and infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, a barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Spasmodic croup
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn’t have a fever but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Airway occlusion
Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient exhibits gagging, wheezing, hoarseness, stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds.
Anthrax (inhalation)
This acute infectious disease is caused by the gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Although the disease most commonly occurs in wild and domestic grazing animals, such as cattle, sheep, and goats, the spores can live in the soil for many years. The disease can occur in humans exposed to infected animals, tissue from infected animals, or biological agents. Most natural cases occur in agricultural regions worldwide. Anthrax may occur in cutaneous, inhalation, or GI forms.
Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhalation of aerosolized spores. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly and causes rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension; death generally results within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetrical mediastinal widening.
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic)
This disorder causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, jugular vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor, and possibly paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma
Asthma attacks commonly occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing and progressing to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Atelectasis
As lung tissue deflates in atelectasis, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, tachycardia, decreased breath sounds, cyanotic skin, and diaphoresis. His chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
Avian influenza
These potentially life-threatening viruses are spread to humans through infected poultry and surfaces contaminated with infected bird excretions. Infected individuals may initially have symptoms of conventional influenza, including a nonproductive cough, fever, sore throat, and muscle aches. The most virulent avian virus, influenza A (H5N1), may lead to severe and life-threatening complications, such as acute respiratory distress and pneumonia. To date this strain of the virus has not surfaced in the United States; however, a recent outbreak in Asian and European countries has caused worldwide concern that the virus may spread through both infected humans and birds. Treatment with two of the four FDA-approved antiviral medications has proven effective with some virus strains, and an experimental vaccine is currently under investigation.
Bronchitis (chronic)
This disorder starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
Bronchogenic carcinoma
The earliest indicators of this disease can be a chronic nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and vague chest pain. The patient may also be wheezing.
Common cold
Most colds start with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progress to some mix of sneezing, rhinorrhea, nasal congestion, sore throat, headache, malaise, fatigue, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Esophageal achalasia
In this disorder, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough and, possibly, recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia.
Esophageal diverticula
The patient with this disorder has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
Esophageal occlusion
This disorder is marked by sudden nonproductive coughing and gagging with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain and dysphagia.
Esophagitis with reflux
This disorder commonly causes a nonproductive nocturnal cough due to regurgitation and aspiration. The patient may also experience chest pain that mimics angina pectoris, heartburn that worsens if he lies down after eating, increased salivation, dysphagia, hematemesis, and melena.
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome A nonproductive cough is common in patients with this disorder, which is marked by noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. Other findings include headache, myalgia, fever, nausea, and vomiting.
Hodgkin’s disease
This disease may cause a crowing nonproductive cough. However, the earliest sign is usually painless swelling of one of the cervical lymph nodes or, occasionally, of the axillary, mediastinal, or inguinal lymph nodes. Another early sign is pruritus. Other findings depend on the degree and location of systemic involvement and include dyspnea, dysphagia, hepatosplenomegaly, edema, jaundice, nerve pain, and hyperpigmentation.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
In this disorder, an acute nonproductive cough, fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 to 6 hours after exposure to an antigen.
Interstitial lung disease
A patient with this disorder has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss.
Laryngeal tumor
A mild nonproductive cough, minor throat discomfort, and hoarseness are early signs of this disorder. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and earache may occur.
Laryngitis
Acute laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient swallows or speaks) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
Legionnaires’ disease
After a prodrome of malaise, headache and, possibly, diarrhea, anorexia, diffuse myalgia, and general weakness, legionnaires’disease causes a nonproductive cough that later produces mucoid, nonpurulent and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum.
Lung abscess
This disorder typically begins with a nonproductive cough, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, fever, headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum.
Mediastinal tumor
A large mediastinal tumor produces a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and retrosternal pain. The patient may also develop stertorous respirations with suprasternal retraction on inspiration, hoarseness, dysphagia, tracheal shift or tug, jugular vein distention, and facial or neck edema.
Pericardial effusion
The most common signs and symptoms of this disorder are dysphagia, fever, pleuritic chest pain, and pericardial friction rub. A severe nonproductive cough occurs rarely.
Pleural effusion
A nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Pneumonia
Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, headache, high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient’s chest may be dull on percussion.
In mycoplasmal pneumonia, a nonproductive cough develops 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, and sore throat. The cough may be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. The patient commonly has a fever but doesn’t appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and low-grade fever.
Pneumothorax
This life-threatening disorder causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
Psittacosis
In this disorder, an initially dry, hacking cough later produces small amounts of blood-streaked, mucoid sputum. Psittacosis may begin abruptly with chills, fever, headache, myalgia, and prostration. The patient may also have tachypnea, fine crackles, epistaxis and, rarely, chest pain.
Pulmonary edema
This disorder initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient’s respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and a cough that produces frothy, blood-streaked sputum.
Pulmonary embolism
A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough, dyspnea, and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. In most cases, though, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended jugular veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
Sarcoidosis
In this disorder, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, vision impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
SARS is an acute infectious disease of unknown etiology; however, a novel coronavirus has been implicated as a possible cause. Although most cases have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), cases have cropped up in Europe and North America. The incubation period is 2 to 7 days, and the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include headache, malaise, a nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Sinusitis (chronic)
This disorder can cause a chronic nonproductive cough due to postnasal drip. The patient’s nasal mucosa may appear inflamed, and he may have nasal congestion and profuse drainage. Usually, his breath smells musty.
Tracheobronchitis (acute)
Initially, this disorder produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough’s onset. Rhonchi and wheezing are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and possibly bronchospasm, severe wheezing, and increased coughing.
Tularemia
Also known as “rabbit fever,” this infectious disease is caused by the gram-negative, non–spore-forming bacterium Francisella tularensis. This organism is found in wild animals, water, and moist soil, typically in rural areas. It’s transmitted to humans through the bite of an infected insect or tick, the handling of infected animal carcasses, the drinking of contaminated water, or the inhalation of the bacterium. It’s considered a possible airborne agent for biological warfare. Signs and symptoms following inhalation of the organism include the abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Pulmonary function tests and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors and trigger coughing.
Drugs
Certain drugs, such as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, may also cause a nonproductive cough.
Treatments
Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Wheezing [Sibilant rhonchi]:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Anaphylaxis
This allergic reaction can cause tracheal edema or bronchospasm, resulting in severe wheezing and stridor. Initial signs and symptoms include apprehension, weakness, sneezing, dyspnea, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Respiratory distress occurs with nasal flaring, accessory muscle use, and intercostal retractions. Other findings include nasal edema and congestion, profuse watery rhinorrhea, chest or throat tightness, and dysphagia. Cardiac effects include arrhythmias and hypotension.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Partial obstruction by a foreign body produces sudden onset of wheezing and possibly stridor; a dry, paroxysmal cough; gagging; and hoarseness. Other findings include tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, and possibly cyanosis. A retained foreign body may cause inflammation leading to fever, pain, and swelling.
Aspiration pneumonitis
In this disorder, wheezing may accompany tachypnea, marked dyspnea, cyanosis, tachycardia, fever, a productive (eventually purulent) cough, and frothy pink sputum.
Asthma
Wheezing is an initial and cardinal sign of asthma. It’s heard at the mouth during expiration. An initially dry cough later becomes productive with thick mucus. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expiration, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions, rhonchi, accessory muscle use, nasal flaring, and tachypnea. Asthma also produces tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Blast lung injury
Wheezing is a common symptom of this condition, which is characterized by hypoxia and respiratory difficulty. The forceful blast wave that follows an explosive detonation can cause serious lung injury, including hemorrhage, contusion, edema, and tearing. In addition to wheezing, patients may exhibit chest pain, dyspnea, cyanosis, and hemoptysis. The diagnosis is confirmed by chest X-rays that show a classic “butterfly” pattern.
Bronchial adenoma
This insidious disorder produces unilateral, possibly severe wheezing. Common features are a chronic cough and recurring hemoptysis. Symptoms of airway obstruction may occur later.
Bronchiectasis
In this disorder, excessive mucus commonly causes intermittent and localized or diffuse wheezing. Characteristic findings include a chronic cough that produces copious amounts of foul-smelling, mucopurulent sputum; hemoptysis; rhonchi; and coarse crackles. Weight loss, fatigue, weakness, exertional dyspnea, fever, malaise, halitosis, and late-stage clubbing may also occur.
Bronchitis (chronic)
This disorder causes wheezing that varies in severity, location, and intensity. Associated findings include prolonged expiration, coarse crackles, scattered rhonchi, and a hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other effects include dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, clubbing, edema, weight gain, and cyanosis.
Bronchogenic carcinoma
Obstruction may cause localized wheezing. Typical findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis (initially blood-tinged sputum, possibly leading to massive hemorrhage), anorexia, and weight loss. Upper extremity edema and chest pain may also occur.
Chemical pneumonitis (acute)
Mucosal injury causes increased secretions and edema, leading to wheezing, dyspnea, orthopnea, crackles, malaise, fever, and a productive cough with purulent sputum. The patient may also have signs of conjunctivitis, pharyngitis, laryngitis, and rhinitis.
Emphysema
Mild to moderate wheezing may occur in this form of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Related findings include dyspnea, tachypnea, diminished breath sounds, peripheral cyanosis, pursed-lip breathing, anorexia, and malaise. Accessory muscle use, barrel chest, a chronic productive cough, and clubbing may also occur.
Inhalation injury
Early findings include hoarseness and coughing, singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, and soot-stained sputum. Later effects may include wheezing, crackles, rhonchi, and respiratory distress.
Pneumothorax (tension)
This life-threatening disorder causes respiratory distress with possible wheezing, dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and sudden, severe, sharp chest pain (often unilateral). Other findings include a dry cough, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, asymmetrical chest wall movement, anxiety, and restlessness. Examination reveals hyperresonance or tympany and diminished or absent breath sounds on the affected side, subcutaneous crepitation, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis
This disorder may cause wheezing and rhonchi along with cough, fever, chills, pleuritic chest pain, headache, weakness, malaise, anorexia, and macular rash.
Pulmonary edema
This life-threatening disorder may cause wheezing, coughing, exertional and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea and, later, orthopnea. Examination reveals tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a diastolic gallop. Severe pulmonary edema produces rapid, labored respirations; diffuse crackles; a productive cough with frothy, bloody sputum; arrhythmias; cold, clammy, cyanotic skin; hypotension; and a thready pulse.
Pulmonary embolus
Diffuse, mild wheezing rarely occurs in this disorder, which is characterized by dyspnea, chest pain, and cyanosis.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
In late stages, fibrosis causes wheezing. Common findings include a mild to severe productive cough with pleuritic chest pain and fine crackles, night sweats, anorexia, weight loss, fever, malaise, dyspnea, and fatigue. Examination reveals dullness on percussion, increased tactile fremitus, and amphoric breath sounds.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
Infected individuals commonly develop wheezing and other symptoms within 4 to 6 days of exposure to this virus. Healthy adults and children older than age 3 usually have mild cases of RSV and experience wheezing along with other common cold-like symptoms of runny nose, cough, and low-grade fever. In children ages 3 and younger, high-pitched expiratory wheezing can accompany a severe cough, rapid breathing, and high-grade fever. RSV is the primary cause of lower respiratory tract infection in infants, who may develop pneumonia or bronchiolitis. Infection-control practices help prevent the spread of this virus, which can be inactivated by disinfectants or soap and water. A vaccine is being researched for this common condition that affects most children by age 2.
Thyroid goiter
This disorder may produce no symptoms, or it may cause wheezing, dysphagia, and respiratory difficulty related to a compressed airway.
Tracheobronchitis
Auscultation may detect wheezing, rhonchi, and crackles. The patient also has a cough, a slight fever, sudden chills, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness.
Wegener’s granulomatosis
This disorder may cause mild to moderate wheezing if it compresses major airways. Other findings include a cough (possibly bloody), dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, hemorrhagic skin lesions, and progressive renal failure. Epistaxis and severe sinusitis are common.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Hemoptysis:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
❑ Bronchitis
❑ Pneumonia
❑ Pulmonary edema
❑ Pulmonary infarction
❑ Tuberculosis
❑ Bronchogenic carcinoma
❑ Chest trauma
❑ Bronchiectasis
❑ Bronchial adenoma
❑ A-V malformation
❑ Aspergilloma
❑ Vasculitis
❑ Lung abscess
❑ Mitral stenosis
❑ Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
❑ Parasitic
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
Sore Throat:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
❑ Rhinovirus
❑ Group A streptococci
❑ Ebstein-Barr virus
❑ Adenovirus
❑ Influenza
❑ Candida/thrush
❑ Herpes simplex virus
❑ Peritonsillar abscess
❑ Mycoplasma pneumoniae
❑ Coxsackievirus
❑ Primary HIV
❑ Neisseria gonorrhea
❑ Epiglottitis
❑ Corynebacterium diphtheriae
❑ Leukemia
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
Wheezing:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
Wheezing
❑ Asthma
❑ Reactive airways disease
❑ Pulmonary edema
❑ Pulmonary embolism
❑ Emphysema
❑ Gastroesophageal reflux
❑ Drug/toxin reaction
❑ Vocal cord dysfunction
❑ Foreign body aspiration
❑ Mediastinal mass
❑ Carcinoid syndrome
Stridor
❑ Mucus plug
❑ Laryngeal trauma
❑ Angioedema
❑ Acute epiglottitis
❑ Retropharyngeal abscess
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
Acute Cough:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
❑ Viral upper respiratory infection
❑ Asthma
❑ Sinusitis
❑ Mycoplasma bronchitis
❑ Pneumonia
❑ Gastroesophageal reflux
❑ Congestive heart failure
❑ ACE inhibitor
❑ Aspiration
❑ Cough in HIV
❑ Thermal
❑ Fume inhalation
❑ Pertussis
❑ Lung abscess
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
Chronic Cough:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
❑ Upper respiratory infection
❑ Allergy
❑ Asthma
❑ Chronic bronchitis
❑ Chronic sinusitis
❑ Gastroesophageal reflux
❑ ACE inhibitor
❑ Pollutants
❑ Psychogenic
❑ Foreign body
❑ Congestive heart failure
❑ Lung cancer
❑ Tuberculosis
❑ Mediastinal mass
❑ Bronchiectasis
❑ Pulmonary fibrosis
❑ Cystic fibrosis
❑ Aspergillosis
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
Hemoptysis:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Aortic aneurysm (ruptured)
Rarely, an aortic aneurysm ruptures into the tracheobronchial tree, causing hemoptysis and sudden death.
Bronchial adenoma
Bronchial adenoma
is an insidious disorder that causes recurring hemoptysis in up to 30% of patients, along with a chronic cough and local wheezing.
Bronchiectasis
Inflamed bronchial surfaces and eroded bronchial blood vessels cause hemoptysis, which can vary from blood-tinged sputum to blood (in about 20% of patients). The patient’s sputum may also be copious, foul-smelling, and purulent. He may exhibit a chronic cough, coarse crackles, clubbing (a late sign), fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, malaise, and dyspnea on exertion.
Bronchitis (chronic)
The first sign of bronchitis is typically a productive cough that lasts at least 3 months. Eventually this leads to production of blood-streaked sputum; massive hemorrhage is unusual. Other respiratory effects include dyspnea, prolonged expirations, wheezing, scattered rhonchi, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, and clubbing (a late sign).
Coagulation disorders
Such disorders as thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation can cause hemoptysis. Besides their specific related findings, coagulation disorders may share such general signs as multisystem hemorrhaging (for example, GI bleeding or epistaxis) and purpuric lesions.
Laryngeal cancer
Hemoptysis occurs in laryngeal cancer, but hoarseness is the usual early sign. Other findings may include dysphagia, dyspnea, stridor, cervical lymphadenopathy, and neck pain.
Lung abscess
In about 50% of patients, lung abscess produces blood-streaked sputum resulting from bronchial ulceration, necrosis, and granulation tissue. Common associated findings include a cough with large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling sputum; fever with chills; diaphoresis; anorexia; weight loss; headache; weakness; dyspnea; pleuritic or dull chest pain; and clubbing. Auscultation reveals tubular or cavernous breath sounds and crackles. Percussion reveals dullness on the affected side.
Lung cancer
Ulceration of the bronchus commonly causes recurring hemoptysis (an early sign), which can vary from blood-streaked sputum to blood. Related findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, fever, anorexia, weight loss, wheezing, and chest pain (a late symptom).
Plague (Yersinia pestis)
The pneumonic form of plague can produce hemoptysis, productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency, along with the sudden onset of chills, fever, headache, and myalgias.
Pneumonia
In up to 50% of patients,
Klebsiella pneumonia produces dark brown or red (currant-jelly) sputum, which is so tenacious that the patient has difficulty expelling it from his mouth. This type of pneumonia begins abruptly with chills, fever, dyspnea, a productive cough, and severe pleuritic chest pain. Associated findings may include cyanosis, prostration, tachycardia, decreased breath sounds, and crackles.
Pneumococcal pneumonia causes pinkish or rusty mucoid sputum. It begins with sudden shaking chills; a rapidly rising temperature; and, in more than 80% of patients, tachycardia and tachypnea. Within a few hours, the patient typically experiences a productive cough along with severe, stabbing, pleuritic pain. The agonizing chest pain leads to rapid, shallow, grunting respirations with splinting. Examination reveals respiratory distress with dyspnea and accessory muscle use, crackles, and dullness on percussion over the affected lung. Malaise, weakness, myalgia, and prostration accompany high fever.
Pulmonary arteriovenous fistula
Occurring in young adults, pulmonary arteriovenous fistula causes intermittent hemoptysis. Associated signs and symptoms include cyanosis, clubbing, mild dyspnea, fatigue, vertigo, syncope, confusion, and speech and visual impairments. The patient may bleed from the nose, mouth, or lips. Ruby red patches appear on the face, tongue, skin, mucous membranes, or nail beds.
Pulmonary contusion
Blunt chest trauma commonly causes a cough with hemoptysis. Other signs and symptoms appear gradually within several hours after the injury and include dyspnea, tachypnea, chest pain, tachycardia, hypotension, crackles, and decreased or absent breath sounds over the affected area. Severe respiratory distress — with oppressive dyspnea, nasal flaring, use of accessory muscles, extreme anxiety, cyanosis, and diaphoresis — may develop at any time.
Pulmonary edema
Severe cardiogenic or noncardiogenic pulmonary edema commonly causes frothy, blood-tinged pink sputum, which accompanies severe dyspnea, orthopnea, gasping, anxiety, cyanosis, diffuse crackles, a ventricular gallop, and cold, clammy skin. This life-threatening condition may also cause tachycardia, lethargy, cardiac arrhythmias, tachypnea, hypotension, and a thready pulse.
Pulmonary embolism with infarction
Hemoptysis is a common finding in pulmonary embolism with infarction — a life-threatening disorder — although massive hemoptysis is infrequent. Typical initial symptoms are dyspnea and anginal or pleuritic chest pain. Other common clinical features include tachycardia, tachypnea, low-grade fever, and diaphoresis. Less commonly, splinting of the chest, leg edema, and — with a large embolus — cyanosis, syncope, and distended jugular veins may occur. Examination reveals decreased breath sounds, pleural friction rub, crackles, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and signs of circulatory collapse (weak, rapid pulse; hypotension), cerebral ischemia (transient loss of consciousness, convulsions), and hypoxemia (restlessness and, particularly in elderly patients, hemiplegia and other focal neurologic deficits).
Pulmonary hypertension (primary)
Features generally develop late. Hemoptysis, exertional dyspnea, and fatigue are common. Angina-like pain usually occurs with exertion and may radiate to the neck but not to the arms. Other findings include arrhythmias, syncope, cough, and hoarseness.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
Blood-streaked or blood-tinged sputum commonly occurs in pulmonary tuberculosis; massive hemoptysis may occur in advanced cavitary tuberculosis. Accompanying respiratory findings include a chronic productive cough, fine crackles after coughing, dyspnea, dullness to percussion, increased tactile fremitus, and possible amphoric breath sounds. The patient may also develop night sweats, malaise, fatigue, fever, anorexia, weight loss, and pleuritic chest pain.
Silicosis
Initially, silicosis — a chronic disorder — causes a productive cough with mucopurulent sputum. Subsequently, the sputum becomes blood-streaked and, occasionally, massive hemoptysis may occur. Other findings include fine, end-inspiratory crackles at lung bases, exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, and weakness.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
In 50% of patients with SLE, pleuritis and pneumonitis cause hemoptysis, cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and crackles. Related findings are a butterfly rash in the acutephase, nondeforming joint pain and stiffness, photosensitivity, Raynaud’s phenomenon, convulsions or psychoses, anorexia with weight loss, and lymphadenopathy.
Tracheal trauma
Torn tracheal mucosa may cause hemoptysis, hoarseness, dysphagia, neck pain, airway occlusion, and respiratory distress.
Wegener’s granulomatosis
Necrotizing, granulomatous vasculitis characterizes Wegener’s granulomatosis — a multisystem disorder. Findings include hemoptysis, chest pain, cough, wheezing, dyspnea, epistaxis, severe sinusitis, and hemorrhagic skin lesions.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Lung or airway injury from bronchoscopy, laryngoscopy, mediastinoscopy, or lung biopsy can cause bleeding and hemoptysis.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
Stridor:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Airway trauma
Local trauma to the upper airway commonly causes acute obstruction, resulting in the sudden onset of stridor. Accompanying this sign are dysphonia, dysphagia, hemoptysis, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachypnea, progressive dyspnea, and shallow respirations. Palpation may reveal subcutaneous crepitation in the neck or upper chest.
Anaphylaxis
With a severe allergic reaction, upper airway edema and laryngospasm cause stridor and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress — nasal flaring, wheezing, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and dyspnea. The patient may also develop nasal congestion and profuse, watery rhinorrhea. Typically, these respiratory effects are preceded by a feeling of impending doom or fear, weakness, diaphoresis, sneezing, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Common associated findings include chest or throat tightness, dysphagia and, possibly, signs of shock, such as hypotension, tachycardia, and cool, clammy skin.
Anthrax (inhalation)
Initial signs and symptoms of inhalation anthrax are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by stridor, fever, dyspnea, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Sudden stridor is characteristic in this life-threatening situation. Related findings include an abrupt onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing, gagging or choking, hoarseness, tachycardia, wheezing, dyspnea, tachypnea, intercostal muscle retractions, diminished breath sounds, cyanosis, and shallow respirations. The patient typically appears anxious and distressed.
Epiglottiditis
With epiglottiditis, an inflammatory condition, stridor is caused by an erythematous, edematous epiglottis that obstructs the upper airway. Stridor occurs along with fever, sore throat, and a croupy cough.
Hypocalcemia
With hypocalcemia, laryngospasm can cause stridor. Other findings include paresthesia, carpopedal spasm, and positive Chvostek’s and Trousseau’s signs.
Inhalation injury
Within 48 hours after inhalation of smoke or noxious fumes, the patient may develop laryngeal edema and bronchospasms, resulting in stridor. Associated signs and symptoms include singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, coughing, hoarseness, sooty sputum, crackles, rhonchi, wheezes, and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress, such as dyspnea, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and nasal flaring.
Laryngeal tumor
Stridor is a late sign and may be accompanied by dysphagia, dyspnea, enlarged cervical nodes, and pain that radiates to the ear. Typically, stridor is preceded by hoarseness, minor throat pain, and a mild, dry cough.
Laryngitis (acute)
Acute laryngitis may cause severe laryngeal edema, resulting in stridor and dyspnea. Its chief sign, however, is mild to severe hoarseness, perhaps with transient voice loss. Other findings include sore throat, dysphagia, dry cough, malaise, and fever.
Mediastinal tumor
Commonly producing no symptoms at first, this type of tumor may eventually compress the trachea and bronchi, resulting in stridor. Its other effects include hoarseness, brassy cough, tracheal shift or tug, jugular vein distention, face and neck swelling, stertorous respirations, and suprasternal retractions on inspiration. The patient may also report dyspnea, dysphagia, and pain in the chest, shoulder, or arm.
Retrosternal thyroid
An anatomic abnormality, retrosternal thyroid causes stridor, dysphagia, cough, hoarseness, and tracheal deviation. It can also cause signs of thyrotoxicosis.
Thoracic aortic aneurysm
If this aneurysm compresses the trachea, it may cause stridor accompanied by dyspnea, wheezing, and a brassy cough. Other findings include hoarseness or complete voice loss, dysphagia, jugular vein distention, prominent chest veins, tracheal tug, paresthesia or neuralgia, and edema of the face, neck, and arms. The patient may also complain of substernal, lower back, abdominal, or shoulder pain.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Bronchoscopy or laryngoscopy may precipitate laryngospasm and stridor.
Medical treatments
After prolonged intubation, the patient may exhibit laryngeal edema and stridor when the tube is removed. Aerosol therapy with epinephrine may reduce stridor. Reintubation may be necessary in some cases. Neck surgery, such as thyroidectomy, may cause laryngeal paralysis and stridor.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
Wheezing:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Anaphylaxis
An allergic reaction, anaphylaxis can cause tracheal edema or bronchospasm, resulting in severe wheezing and stridor. Initial signs and symptoms include fright, weakness, sneezing, dyspnea, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Respiratory distress occurs with nasal flaring, accessory muscle use, and intercostal retractions. Other findings include nasal edema and congestion with profuse, watery rhinorrhea as well as chest or throat tightness and dysphagia. Cardiac effects include arrhythmias and hypotension.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Partial obstruction by a foreign body produces the sudden onset of wheezing and possibly stridor; a dry, paroxysmal cough; gagging; and hoarseness. Other findings include tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds and, possibly, cyanosis. A retained foreign body may cause inflammation leading to fever, pain, and swelling.
Aspiration pneumonitis
With aspiration pneumonitis, wheezing may accompany tachypnea, marked dyspnea, cyanosis, tachycardia, fever, a productive (eventually purulent) cough, and pink, frothy sputum.
Asthma
Wheezing is an initial and cardinal sign of asthma. It’s heard at the mouth during expiration. An initially dry cough later becomes productive with thick mucus. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expiration, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions, rhonchi, accessory muscle use, nasal flaring, and tachypnea. Asthma also produces tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Bronchial adenoma
An insidious disorder, bronchial adenoma produces unilateral, possibly severe wheezing. Common features are chronic cough and recurring hemoptysis. Symptoms of airway obstruction may occur later.
Bronchiectasis
Excessive mucus commonly causes intermittent and localized or diffuse wheezing. A copious, foul-smelling, mucopurulent cough is classic. It’s accompanied by hemoptysis, rhonchi, and coarse crackles. Weight loss, fatigue, weakness, exertional dyspnea, fever, malaise, halitosis, and late-stage clubbing may also occur.
Bronchitis (chronic)
Chronic bronchitis causes wheezing that varies in severity, location, and intensity. Associated findings include prolonged expiration, coarse crackles, scattered rhonchi, and a hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other effects include dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, clubbing, edema, weight gain, and cyanosis.
Bronchogenic carcinoma
Obstruction may cause localized wheezing. Typical findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis (initially blood-tinged sputum, possibly leading to massive hemorrhage), anorexia, and weight loss. Upper extremity edema and chest pain may also occur.
Chemical pneumonitis (acute)
Mucosal injury causes increased secretions and edema, leading to wheezing, dyspnea, orthopnea, crackles, malaise, fever, and a productive cough with purulent sputum. The patient may also have signs of conjunctivitis, pharyngitis, laryngitis, and rhinitis.
Emphysema
Mild to moderate wheezing may occur with emphysema, a form of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Related findings include dyspnea, tachypnea, diminished breath sounds, peripheral cyanosis, pursed-lip breathing, anorexia, and malaise. Accessory muscle use, barrel chest, a chronic productive cough, and clubbing may also occur.
Inhalation injury
Wheezing may eventually occur. Early findings include hoarseness and coughing, singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, and soot-stained sputum. Later effects are crackles, rhonchi, and respiratory distress.
Pneumothorax (tension)
A life-threatening disorder, tension pneumothorax causes respiratory distress with possible wheezing, dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and sudden, severe, sharp chest pain (commonly unilateral). Other findings include a dry cough, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, asymmetrical chest wall movement, anxiety, and restlessness. Examination reveals hyperresonance or tympany and diminished or absent breath sounds on the affected side, subcutaneous crepitation, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis
Pulmonary coccidiodomycosis may cause wheezing and rhonchi along with cough, fever, chills, pleuritic chest pain, headache, weakness, malaise, anorexia, and a macular rash.
Pulmonary edema
Wheezing may occur with pulmonary edema, a life-threatening disorder. Other signs and symptoms include coughing, exertional and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea and, later, orthopnea. Examination reveals tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a diastolic gallop. Severe pulmonary edema produces rapid, labored respirations and a productive cough with frothy, bloody sputum. The patient may also exhibit diffuse crackles, arrhythmias, hypotension, a thready pulse, and cold, clammy, cyanotic skin.
Pulmonary embolus
Rarely, diffuse, mild wheezing occurs in pulmonary embolus. The condition is characterized by dyspnea, chest pain, and cyanosis.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
In late stages, fibrosis causes wheezing. Common findings include a mild to severe productive cough with pleuritic chest pain and fine crackles, night sweats, anorexia, weight loss, fever, malaise, dyspnea, and fatigue. Other features are dullness on percussion, increased tactile fremitus, and amphoric breath sounds.
Thyroid goiter
Thyroid goiter may be asymptomatic, or it may cause wheezing, dysphagia, and respiratory difficulty related to a compressed airway.
Tracheobronchitis
Auscultation may detect wheezing, rhonchi, and crackles. The patient also has cough, slight fever, sudden chills, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness.
Wegener’s granulomatosis
Wegener’s granulomatosis may cause mild to moderate wheezing if it compresses major airways. Other findings include cough (possibly bloody), dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, hemorrhagic skin lesions, and progressive renal failure. Epistaxis and severe sinusitis are common.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Actinomycosis begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. Fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy, and possibly purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
A severe asthma attack, which can be life-threatening, may produce mucoid, tenacious sputum and mucus plugs. Such an attack typically starts with a dry cough and mild wheezing, and then progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a productive cough. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retraction on inspiration, accessory muscle use, rhonchi, crackles, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis. Attacks commonly occur at night or during sleep.
The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis; his sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, and then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Common cold.
When the common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications of the common cold include a dry, hacking cough, sneezing, headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Legionnaires’ disease causes a cough that produces scant mucoid, nonpurulent, and possibly blood-streaked sputum. Prodromal signs and symptoms typically include malaise, fatigue, weakness, anorexia, diffuse myalgia and, possibly, diarrhea. Then, within 48 hours, the patient develops a dry cough and sudden high fever with chills. Many patients also have pleuritic chest pain, headache, tachypnea, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, crackles, mild temporary amnesia, disorientation, confusion, flushing, mild diaphoresis, and prostration.
The cardinal sign of ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, and possibly blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, fever with chills, dyspnea, headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Nocardiosis.
Nocardiosis causes a productive cough with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, malaise, fatigue, weight loss, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion.
North American blastomycosis.
With North American blastomycosis — a chronic disorder — coughing is dry and hacking, or produces bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Plague is an acute bacterial infection caused by
Yersinia pestis. It’s one of the most virulent infections and, if untreated, one of the most potentially lethal diseases known. Most cases are sporadic, but the potential for epidemic spread still exists. Clinical forms include bubonic (the most common), septicemic, and pneumonic plagues. The bubonic form is transmitted to man when bitten by infected fleas. Signs and symptoms include fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the fleabite. Septicemic plague develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form may be contracted from person-to-person through direct contact via the respiratory system or through biological warfare from aerosolization and inhalation of the organism. The onset is usually sudden with chills, fever, headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia.
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Mycoplasma pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. Most common, however, is a nonproductive cough that starts 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, fever, and sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles but generally don’t appear seriously ill.
Psittacosis.
As psittacosis progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly, with chills, fever, headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe infection may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, sore throat, headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
When severe, pulmonary edema — a life-threatening disorder — causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea as well as paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea. Coughing may be nonproductive initially. Other signs and symptoms include fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. As the patient’s respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and productive cough, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. The patient’s skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic, his blood pressure falls, and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism.
Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less-common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary emphysema.
Pulmonary emphysema causes a chronic productive cough with scant, mucoid, translucent, grayish white sputum that can become mucopurulent. The patient is thin and has the characteristic “pink puffer” appearance with weight loss, increased accessory muscle use, tachypnea, grunting expirations through pursed lips, diminished breath sounds, exertional dyspnea, rhonchi, barrel chest, and anorexia. Clubbing is a late sign.
Pulmonary tuberculosis.
Pulmonary tuberculosis causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis.
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later — following the onset of chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness — becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Other causes
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests may increase productive coughing.
Drugs.
Expectorants, of course, increase productive coughing. These include ammonium chloride, calcium iodide, guaifenesin, iodinated glycerol, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, and then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis.
Epiglottiditis is a life-threatening disorder that has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Also known as
viral croup, laryngotracheobronchitis is most common in children between ages 9 and 18 months and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces low to moderate fever, runny nose, poor appetite, and infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Spasmodic croup.
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn’t have fever but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
Hemoptysis:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Bronchial adenoma
Bronchial adenoma is an insidious disorder that causes recurring hemoptysis along with a chronic cough and local wheezing. The patient with bronchial adenoma may also have recurrent infection, dyspnea, and wheezing.
Bronchiectasis
With bronchiectasis, inflamed bronchial surfaces and eroded bronchial blood vessels cause hemoptysis, which can vary from blood-tinged sputum to blood (in about 20% of patients). The patient’s sputum may also be copious, foul-smelling, and purulent. He may exhibit a chronic cough, coarse crackles, clubbing (a late sign), fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, malaise, and dyspnea on exertion.
Bronchitis (chronic)
The first sign of chronic bronchitis is typically a productive cough that lasts at least 3 months. Eventually this leads to production of blood-streaked sputum; massive hemorrhage is unusual. Other respiratory effects include dyspnea, prolonged expirations, wheezing, scattered rhonchi, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, and clubbing (a late sign).
Coagulation disorders
Such coagulation disorders as thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation can cause hemoptysis. In addition to their specific related findings, coagulation disorders may share such general signs as multisystem hemorrhaging (for example, GI bleeding or epistaxis) and purpuric lesions.
Laryngeal cancer
Hemoptysis occurs in laryngeal cancer, but hoarseness is the usual early sign. Other findings may include dysphagia, dyspnea, stridor, cervical lymphadenopathy, and neck pain.
Lung abscess
In about 50% of patients, a lung abscess produces blood-streaked sputum resulting from bronchial ulceration, necrosis, and granulation tissue. Common associated findings include a cough with large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling sputum; fever with chills; diaphoresis; anorexia; weight loss; headache; weakness; dyspnea; pleuritic or dull chest pain; and clubbing. Auscultation reveals tubular or cavernous breath sounds and crackles. Percussion reveals dullness on the affected side.
Lung cancer
In patients with lung cancer, ulceration of the bronchus commonly causes recurring hemoptysis (an early sign), which can vary from blood-streaked sputum to blood. Related findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, fever, anorexia, weight loss, wheezing, and chest pain (a late symptom).
Pneumonia
In up to 50% of patients, Klebsiella pneumonia produces dark brown or red (currant-jelly) sputum, which is so tenacious that the patient has difficulty expelling it from his mouth. This type of pneumonia begins abruptly with chills, fever, dyspnea, a productive cough, and severe pleuritic chest pain. Associated findings may include cyanosis, prostration, tachycardia, decreased breath sounds, and crackles.
Pneumococcal pneumonia causes pinkish or rusty mucoid sputum. It begins with sudden shaking chills; a rapidly rising temperature; and, in over 80% of patients, tachycardia and tachypnea. Within a few hours, the patient typically experiences a productive cough along with severe, stabbing, pleuritic pain. The agonizing chest pain leads to rapid, shallow, grunting respirations with splinting. Examination reveals respiratory distress with dyspnea and accessory muscle use, crackles, and dullness on percussion over the affected lung. Malaise, weakness, myalgia, and prostration accompany high fever.
Pulmonary contusion
Pulmonary contusion, resulting from blunt chest trauma, commonly causes a cough with hemoptysis. Other signs and symptoms appear gradually within several hours after the injury and include dyspnea, tachypnea, chest pain, tachycardia, hypotension, crackles, and decreased or absent breath sounds over the affected area. Severe respiratory distress — with oppressive dyspnea, nasal flaring, use of accessory muscles, extreme anxiety, cyanosis, and diaphoresis — may develop at any time.
Pulmonary edema
Severe pulmonary edema commonly causes frothy, blood-tinged pink sputum, which accompanies severe dyspnea, orthopnea, gasping, anxiety, cyanosis, diffuse crackles, a ventricular gallop, and cold, clammy skin. This life-threatening condition may also cause tachycardia, lethargy, cardiac arrhythmias, tachypnea, hypotension, and a thready pulse.
Pulmonary embolism with infarction
Hemoptysis is a common finding in this life-threatening disorder, although massive hemoptysis is infrequent. Typical initial symptoms are dyspnea and anginal or pleuritic chest pain. Other common clinical features include tachycardia, tachypnea, low-grade fever, and diaphoresis. Less commonly, splinting of the chest, leg edema, and — with a large embolus — cyanosis, syncope, and distended jugular veins may occur. Examination reveals decreased breath sounds, pleural friction rub, crackles, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and signs of circulatory collapse (weak, rapid pulse; hypotension), cerebral ischemia (transient loss of consciousness, convulsions), and hypoxemia (restlessness and, particularly in elderly patients, hemiplegia and other focal neurologic deficits).
Pulmonary hypertension (primary)
Features of primary pulmonary hypertension generally develop late. Hemoptysis, exertional dyspnea, and fatigue are common. Angina-like pain usually occurs with exertion and may radiate to the neck but not to the arms. Other findings include arrhythmias, syncope, cough, and hoarseness.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
Blood-streaked or blood-tinged sputum commonly occurs in pulmonary tuberculosis; massive hemoptysis may occur in advanced cavitary tuberculosis. Accompanying respiratory findings include a chronic productive cough, fine crackles after coughing, dyspnea, dullness to percussion, increased tactile fremitus, and possible amphoric breath sounds. The patient may also develop night sweats, malaise, fatigue, fever, anorexia, weight loss, and pleuritic chest pain.
Silicosis
Initially, silicosis causes a productive cough with mucopurulent sputum. Subsequently, the sputum becomes blood-streaked and, occasionally, massive hemoptysis may occur. Other findings include fine, end-inspiratory crackles at lung bases, exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, and weakness.
Systemic lupus erythematosus
In 50% of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), pleuritis and pneumonitis cause hemoptysis, cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and crackles. Related findings are a butterfly rash in the acutephase, nondeforming joint pain and stiffness, photosensitivity, Raynaud’s phenomenon, convulsions or psychoses, anorexia with weight loss, and lymphadenopathy.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Lung or airway injury from bronchoscopy, laryngoscopy, mediastinoscopy, or lung biopsy can cause bleeding and hemoptysis.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Stridor:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Airway trauma
Local trauma to the upper airway commonly causes acute obstruction, resulting in the sudden onset of stridor. Accompanying this sign are dysphonia, dysphagia, hemoptysis, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachypnea, progressive dyspnea, and shallow respirations. Palpation may reveal subcutaneous crepitation in the neck or upper chest.
Anaphylaxis
With a severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis), upper airway edema and laryngospasm cause stridor and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress: nasal flaring, wheezing, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and dyspnea. The patient may also develop nasal congestion and profuse, watery rhinorrhea. Typically, these respiratory effects are preceded by a feeling of impending doom or fear, weakness, diaphoresis, sneezing, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Common associated findings of anaphylaxis include chest or throat tightness, dysphagia and, possibly, signs of shock, such as hypotension, tachycardia, and cool, clammy skin.
Anthrax (inhalation)
Initial signs and symptoms of inhalation anthrax are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by stridor, fever, dyspnea, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Sudden stridor is characteristic in this life-threatening situation. Related findings include abrupt onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing, gagging or choking, hoarseness, tachycardia, wheezing, dyspnea, tachypnea, intercostal muscle retractions, diminished breath sounds, cyanosis, and shallow respirations. The patient typically appears anxious and distressed.
Epiglottiditis
With epiglottiditis, a life-threatening inflammatory condition, stridor is caused by an erythematous, edematous epiglottis that obstructs the upper airway. Stridor occurs along with fever, sore throat, and a croupy cough. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia.
Hypocalcemia
With hypocalcemia, laryngospasm can cause stridor. Other findings include paresthesia, carpopedal spasm, hyperactive deep tendon reflexes, muscle twitching and cramping, and positive Chvostek’s and Trousseau’s signs.
Inhalation injury
Within 48 hours after inhalation of smoke or noxious fumes, the patient may develop laryngeal edema and bronchospasms, resulting in stridor. Associated signs and symptoms include singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, coughing, hoarseness, sooty sputum, crackles, rhonchi, wheezes, and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress, such as dyspnea, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and nasal flaring.
Laryngeal tumor
Stridor is a late sign of laryngeal tumor and may be accompanied by dysphagia, dyspnea, enlarged cervical nodes, and pain that radiates to the ear. Typically, stridor is preceded by hoarseness, minor throat pain, and a mild, dry cough.
Laryngitis (acute)
Acute laryngitis may cause severe laryngeal edema, resulting in stridor and dyspnea. Its chief sign, however, is mild to severe hoarseness, perhaps with transient voice loss. Other findings include sore throat, dysphagia, dry cough, malaise, and fever.
Mediastinal tumor
Commonly producing no symptoms at first, a mediastinal tumor may eventually compress the trachea and bronchi, resulting in stridor. Its other effects include hoarseness, brassy cough, tracheal shift or tug, dilated neck veins, swelling of the face and neck, stertorous respirations, and suprasternal retractions on inspiration. The patient may also report dyspnea, dysphagia, and pain in the chest, shoulder, or arm.
Thoracic aortic aneurysm
If a thoracic aortic aneurysm compresses the trachea, it may cause stridor accompanied by dyspnea, wheezing, and a brassy cough. Other findings include hoarseness or complete voice loss, dysphagia, jugular vein distention, prominent chest veins, tracheal tug, paresthesia or neuralgia, and edema of the face, neck, and arms. The patient may also complain of substernal, lower back, abdominal, or shoulder pain.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Bronchoscopy or laryngoscopy may precipitate laryngospasm and stridor.
Treatments
After prolonged intubation, the patient may exhibit laryngeal edema and stridor when the tube is removed. Aerosol therapy with epinephrine may reduce stridor. Reintubation may be necessary in some cases. Neck surgery, such as thyroidectomy, may cause laryngeal paralysis and stridor.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Wheezing:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Anaphylaxis
Anaphylaxis is an allergic reaction that can cause tracheal edema or bronchospasm, resulting in severe wheezing and stridor. Initial signs and symptoms of anaphylaxis include fright, weakness, sneezing, dyspnea, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Respiratory distress occurs with nasal flaring, accessory muscle use, and intercostal retractions. Other findings include nasal edema and congestion; profuse, watery rhinorrhea; chest or throat tightness; and dysphagia. Cardiac effects include arrhythmias and hypotension.
Aspiration of a foreign body
Partial obstruction by a foreign body produces sudden onset of wheezing and possibly stridor; a dry, paroxysmal cough; gagging; and hoarseness. Other findings include tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, and possibly cyanosis. A retained foreign body may cause inflammation leading to fever, pain, and swelling.
Aspiration pneumonitis
With aspiration pneumonitis, wheezing may accompany tachypnea, marked dyspnea, cyanosis, tachycardia, fever, productive (eventually purulent) cough, and pink, frothy sputum.
Asthma
Wheezing is an initial and cardinal sign of asthma. It’s heard at the mouth during expiration. An initially dry cough later becomes productive with thick mucus. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expiration, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions, rhonchi, accessory muscle use, nasal flaring, and tachypnea. Asthma also produces tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Bronchial adenoma
Bronchial adenoma is an insidious disorder that produces unilateral, possibly severe wheezing. Common features are chronic cough and recurring hemoptysis. Symptoms of airway obstruction may occur later.
Bronchiectasis
With bronchiectasis, excessive mucus commonly causes intermittent and localized or diffuse wheezing. A copious, foul-smelling, mucopurulent cough is classic. The cough is accompanied by hemoptysis, rhonchi, and coarse crackles. Weight loss, fatigue, weakness, exertional dyspnea, fever, malaise, halitosis, and late-stage clubbing may also occur.
Bronchitis (chronic)
Chronic bronchitis causes wheezing that varies in severity, location, and intensity. Associated findings include prolonged expiration, coarse crackles, scattered rhonchi, and a hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other effects include dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, clubbing, edema, weight gain, and cyanosis.
Bronchogenic carcinoma
Obstruction from bronchogenic carcinoma may cause localized wheezing. Typical findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis (initially blood-tinged sputum, possibly leading to massive hemorrhage), anorexia, and weight loss. Upper extremity edema and chest pain may also occur.
Chemical pneumonitis (acute)
With acute chemical pneumonitis, mucosal injury causes increased secretions and edema, leading to wheezing, dyspnea, orthopnea, crackles, malaise, fever, and a productive cough with purulent sputum. The patient may also have signs of conjunctivitis, pharyngitis, laryngitis, and rhinitis.
Emphysema
Mild to moderate wheezing may occur with emphysema, a form of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Related findings include dyspnea, malaise, tachypnea, diminished breath sounds, peripheral cyanosis, pursed-lip breathing, anorexia, and malaise. Accessory muscle use, barrel chest, a chronic productive cough, and clubbing may also occur.
Inhalation injury
Wheezing may eventually occur with inhalation injury. Early findings include hoarseness and coughing, singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, and soot-stained sputum. Later effects are crackles, rhonchi, and respiratory distress.
Pneumothorax (tension)
Tension pneumothorax, a life-threatening disorder, causes respiratory distress with possible wheezing, dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and sudden, severe, sharp chest pain (often unilateral). Other findings include a dry cough, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, asymmetrical chest wall movement, anxiety, and restlessness. Examination reveals hyperresonance or tympany and diminished or absent breath sounds on the affected side, subcutaneous crepitation, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis may cause wheezing and rhonchi along with cough, fever, chills, pleuritic chest pain, headache, weakness, fatigue, sore throat, backache, malaise, anorexia, and an itchy, macular rash.
Pulmonary edema
Wheezing may occur with pulmonary edema , a life-threatening disorder. Other signs and symptoms of pulmonary edema include coughing, exertional and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea and, later, orthopnea. Examination reveals tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a diastolic gallop. Severe pulmonary edema produces rapid, labored respirations; diffuse crackles; a productive cough with frothy, bloody sputum; arrhythmias; cold, clammy, cyanotic skin; hypotension; and thready pulse.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
In late stages, fibrosis causes wheezing. Common findings include a mild to severe productive cough with pleuritic chest pain and fine crackles, night sweats, anorexia, weight loss, fever, malaise, dyspnea, and fatigue. Other features are dullness to percussion, increased tactile fremitus, and amphoric breath sounds.
CULTURAL CUE:Those living in Appalachian regions have a 50% higher mortality from tuberculosis than the national average. They also have a higher incidence of pneumonia, influenza, and black lung disease. The higher rate of respiratory tract diseases may be related to the high-risk occupations of the region, such as those in the mining, timber, and textile industries.
Thyroid goiter
Thyroid goiter may not produce symptoms, or it may cause wheezing, dysphagia, and respiratory difficulty related to a compressed airway. The neck will appear swollen and distended.
Tracheobronchitis
Auscultation of the patient with tracheobronchitis may detect wheezing, rhonchi, and moist or coarse crackles. The patient also has a cough, slight fever, sudden chills, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Aspiration pneumonitis
Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy, possibly purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, fever, tachypnea, fatigue, chest pain, halitosis, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
Asthma (acute)
A severe asthma attack, which can be life-threatening, may produce mucoid, tenacious sputum and mucus plugs. Such an attack typically starts with a dry cough and mild wheezing, then progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a productive cough. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retraction on inspiration, accessory muscle use, rhonchi, crackles, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis. Attacks commonly occur at night or during sleep.
Bronchiectasis
The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis: His sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis (chronic)
Chronic bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis
Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Common cold
When a common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications of the common cold include a dry, hacking cough, sneezing, headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious, mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Legionnaires’ disease
Legionnaires’ disease causes a cough that produces scant mucoid, nonpurulent, possibly blood-streaked sputum. Prodromal signs and symptoms typically include malaise, fatigue, weakness, anorexia, diffuse myalgia and, possibly, diarrhea. Then, within 48 hours, the patient develops a dry cough and a sudden high fever with chills. Many patients also have pleuritic chest pain, headache, tachypnea, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, crackles, mild temporary amnesia, disorientation, confusion, flushing, mild diaphoresis, and prostration.
Lung abscess (ruptured)
The cardinal sign of ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, possibly blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, fever with chills, dyspnea, headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
Lung cancer
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Plague
Signs and symptoms of plague, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, include fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the flea bite. Septicemic plague develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The onset of the pneumonic form is usually sudden with chills, fever, headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Pulmonary edema
Severe, pulmonary edema is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms of pulmonary edema include exertional dyspnea; paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea; and coughing, which may be nonproductive initially. Others include fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. As the patient’s respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and a productive cough, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism
Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended neck veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary emphysema
Pulmonary emphysema causes a chronic productive cough with scant, mucoid, translucent, grayish white sputum that can become mucopurulent. The patient is thin and has the characteristic “pink puffer” appearance with weight loss, increased accessory muscle use, tachypnea, grunting expirations through pursed lips, diminished breath sounds, exertional dyspnea, rhonchi, barrel chest, and anorexia. Clubbing is a late sign.
Pulmonary tuberculosis
Pulmonary tuberculosis causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Tracheobronchitis
With tracheobronchitis, inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later — following the onset of chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness — becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests may increase productive coughing.
Drugs
Expectorants, of course, increase productive coughing. These include guaifenesin, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Respiratory therapy
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Aspiration of foreign body
Partial obstruction of the upper airway caused by aspiration of foreign body first produces sudden hoarseness, then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis
Epiglottiditis, a life-threatening disorder, has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute)
Also known as viral croup, acute laryngotracheobronchitis is most common in children between 9 and 18 months old and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces low to moderate fever, runny nose, poor appetite, and infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Spasmodic croup
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn’t have a fever but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Airway occlusion
Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient is gagging, wheezing, and hoarse, with stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds. If the patient has aspirated a foreign body he may exhibit the universal sign for choking — a hand clutched to the throat, with thumb and fingers extended.
Anthrax (inhalation)
Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhalation of aerosolized spores of the gram-positive bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic)
A thoracic aortic aneurysm causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, neck vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor and, possibly, paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma
Asthma attacks commonly occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing; this progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Atelectasis
As lung tissue deflates, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient with atelectasis may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, and tachycardia. His skin may be cyanotic and diaphoretic, his breath sounds may be decreased, his chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
Bronchitis (chronic)
Chronic bronchitis starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
Bronchogenic carcinoma
The earliest indicators of bronchogenic carcinoma can be a chronic, nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and vague chest pain. The patient may also have wheezing, hemoptysis, and stridor.
Common cold
The common cold generally starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progresses to some mix of sneezing, headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea, myalgia, arthralgia, nasal congestion, and sore throat.
Esophageal achalasia
With esophageal achalasia, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough. The patient may also have recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia. The patient may report weight loss, heartburn, and chest pain that increases after eating.
Esophageal diverticula
The patient with esophageal diverticula has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
Esophageal occlusion
Esophageal occlusion is marked by immediate nonproductive coughing and gagging, with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain, dysphagia, and the inability to swallow.
Esophagitis with reflux
Esophagitis with reflux commonly causes a nonproductive nocturnal cough due to regurgitation and aspiration. The patient may experience chest pain that mimics angina pectoris; heartburn that worsens if he lies down after eating; and increased salivation, dysphagia, hematemesis, and melena.
Hodgkin’s disease
Hodgkin’s disease may cause a crowing nonproductive cough. However, the earliest sign is usually painless swelling of one of the cervical lymph nodes or, occasionally, of the axillary, mediastinal, or inguinal lymph nodes. Another early sign is pruritus. Other findings depend on the degree and location of systemic involvement and include dyspnea, dysphagia, hepatosplenomegaly, edema, jaundice, nerve pain, and hyperpigmentation.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
With hypersensitivity pneumonitis, an acute nonproductive cough, fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 to 6 hours after exposure to an antigen. The patient may also report chest tightness and extreme fatigue.
Interstitial lung disease
A patient with interstitial lung disease has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss. Other findings include dyspnea on exertion and vague chest pain.
Laryngeal tumor
A mild, nonproductive cough is an early sign of a laryngeal tumor, in addition to minor throat discomfort and hoarseness. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and earache may occur.
Laryngitis
In its acute form, laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient is swallowing or speaking) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
Legionnaires’ disease
After a prodrome of malaise, headache and, possibly, diarrhea, anorexia, diffuse myalgia, and general weakness, legionnaires’disease causes a nonproductive cough that later produces mucoid, mucopurulent and, possibly, bloody sputum.
Lung abscess
Lung abscess typically begins with nonproductive coughing, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, fever, headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, possibly bloody sputum.
Mediastinal tumor
A large mediastinal tumor produces a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and retrosternal pain. The patient may also develop stertorous respirations with suprasternal retraction on inspiration, hoarseness, dysphagia, tracheal shift or tug, neck vein distention, and facial or neck edema.
Pleural effusion
A nonproductive cough along with dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Pneumonia
Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, headache, high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient’s chest may be dull on percussion.
With mycoplasma pneumonia, a nonproductive cough arises 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, and sore throat. The cough can be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. Fever commonly occurs, but the patient doesn’t appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and low-grade fever.
Pneumothorax
Pneumothorax, a life-threatening disorder, causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
Pulmonary edema
Pulmonary edema initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient’s respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and coughing that produces frothy, bloody sputum.
Pulmonary embolism
A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough along with dyspnea and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. More commonly, though, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended neck veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
Sarcoidosis
With sarcoidosis, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, vision impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
CULTURAL CUE:The risk of sarcoidosis is greatest in young adult Blacks, especially Black women. Others at high risk include those of Scandinavian, German, Irish, or Puerto Rican descent.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome
The incubation period of this acute infectious disease of unknown etiology is 2 to 7 days, and the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) include headache, malaise, a dry nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
CULTURAL CUE:Most cases of SARS have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), although some cases have appeared in Europe and North America.
Sinusitis (chronic)
Chronic sinusitis can cause a chronic nonproductive cough due to postnasal drip. The patient’s nasal mucosa may appear inflamed, and he may have nasal congestion and profuse drainage. Usually, his breath smells musty.
Tracheobronchitis (acute)
Initially, acute tracheobronchitis produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough’s onset. Rhonchi and wheezes are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° F to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and possibly bronchospasm, with severe wheezing and increased coughing.
Tularemia
Following inhalation of the gram-negative, non-spore-forming bacterium Francisella tularensis, patients with tularemia show signs and symptoms including the abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, generalized myalgia, nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Pulmonary function tests and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors, triggering coughing.
Treatments
Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Hemoptysis:
Principal Causes of Hemoptysis
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
- Neonates
- Airwaytrauma
- Pulmonary hemorrhage
- Bleeding disorders
- Infants, children, and adolescents
- Trauma
- Pulmonary disorders
- Bronchitis
- Pneumonia
- Lung abscess
- Bronchiectasis including cystic fibrosis
- Foreign body
- Idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis
- Pulmonary hemosiderosis with cow milkhypersensitivity
- Vascular anomalies
- Pulmonaryarteriovenous malformation
- Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia(Osler-Rondu-Weber disease)
- Neoplasm
- Cardiac disorders
- Goodpasture syndrome
- Vasculitis
- Bleeding disorders
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Sore Throat:
Principal Causes of Sore Throat
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
- Infection
- Pharyngitis/tonsillitis
- Viral
- Bacterial
- Group A Streptococcus
- Other bacteria
- Peritonsillar, retropharyngeal, andlateral pharyngeal abscesses
- Irritants
- Excessive dryness
- Dust
- Smoke
- Postnasal drip secondary to allergicrhinitis or sinusitis
- Trauma
- Vocal abuse
- Thermal injury
- Foreign body
- Caustic substances
- Psychogenic
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Wheezing:
Principal Causes of Wheezing
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
- Asthma
- Bronchiolitis
- Pneumonia
- Foreign body
- Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
- Cystic fibrosis
- Cardiac failure
- Bronchial obstruction
- Anaphylaxis
- Gastroesophageal reflux
- Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
- Psychogenic
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Cough:
Principal Causes of Cough
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
- Infection/inflammation
- Upperrespiratory tract infection
- Sinusitis
- Laryngitis
- Croup
- Tracheitis
- Bronchitis
- Pertussis
- Bronchiolitis
- Pneumonia
- Viral
- Bacterial
- Tuberculosis
- Chlamydia
- Legionella
- Nocardia
- Mycoplasma
- Fungal
- Histoplasmosis
- Coccidioidomycosis
- Aspergillosis
- Blastomycosis
- Protozoa
- Chemical pneumonia
- Aspiration pneumonia
- Cystic fibrosis
- Bronchiectasis
- Lung abscess
- Allergic disorders
- Allergicrhinitis
- Asthma
- Mechanical or chemical irritation
- Environmentalirritants
- Foreign body aspiration
- Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
- Congenital anomalies
- Cardiac failure
- Gastroesophageal reflux
- Swallowing dysfunction
- Immotile cilia syndrome
- Neoplasm
- Reflex cough
- Psychogenic, including habitual cough
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Stertor, Stridor, and Airway Obstruction:
Principal Causes of Airway Obstruction
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
- Noseand nasopharynx
- Congenital
- Choanal atresia
- Craniofacial anomalies
- Midline masses
- Infection/inflammation
- Rhinitis
- Adenoid hypertrophy
- Polyps
- Trauma
- Neoplasm
- Oropharynx and hypopharynx
- Congenital
- Micrognathiaand other skull base abnormalities
- Macroglossia
- Decreased pharyngeal muscle tone
- Infection/inflammation
- Tonsillarhypertrophy
- Abscess
- Foreign body
- Trauma
- Neoplasm
- Supraglottic
- Congenital
- Laryngomalacia
- Laryngeal cyst and laryngocele
- Infection/inflammation
- Supraglottitis
- Gastroesophageal reflux
- Hereditary angioedema
- Trauma
- Neoplasm
- Glottic
- Congenital
- Laryngeal web
- Laryngeal cleft
- Vocal cord paralysis
- Infection/inflammation
- Laryngitis
- Laryngeal spasm
- Foreign body
- Trauma
- Neoplasm
- Subglottic
- Congenital
- Subglottic stenosis
- Cysts
- Infection/inflammation
- Croup
- Bacterial tracheitis
- Trauma
- Neoplasm
- Tracheobronchial
- Congenital
- Tracheomalacia
- Tracheal web
- Tracheal cysts
- Tracheal stenosis
- Vascular anomalies
- Infection/inflammation
- Foreign body
- Trauma
- Neoplasm
- Tracheal
- Thyroid
- Mediastinal masses
- Psychogenic
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Hemoptysis:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Blast lung injury.Although individuals with blast lung injury may not have obvious external chest injuries, they sometimes show other indications of internal damage, such as hemoptysis. Health care providers should evaluate survivors of explosive detonations for other classic signs and symptoms of a blast lung injury, such as chest pain, cyanosis, dyspnea, and wheezing. Treatment includes careful administration of fluids and oxygen to ensure tissue perfusion.
Bronchial adenoma.Bronchial adenoma is an insidious disorder that causes recurring hemoptysis in up to 30% of patients, along with a chronic cough and local wheezing.
Bronchiectasis.Inflamed bronchial surfaces and eroded bronchial blood vessels cause hemoptysis, which can vary from blood-tinged sputum to blood (in about 20% of cases). The patient's sputum may also be copious, foul-smelling, and purulent. He may exhibit a chronic cough, coarse crackles, clubbing (a late sign), a fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, malaise, and dyspnea on exertion.
Bronchitis (chronic).The first sign of chronic bronchitis is typically a productive cough that lasts at least 3 months. Eventually this leads to the production of blood-streaked sputum; massive hemorrhage is unusual. Other respiratory effects include dyspnea, prolonged expirations, wheezing, scattered rhonchi, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, and clubbing (a late sign).
Coagulation disorders.Such disorders as thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation can cause hemoptysis. Besides their specific related findings, these disorders may share such general signs as multisystem hemorrhaging (for example, GI bleeding or epistaxis) and purpuric lesions.
Lung abscess.In about 50% of patients, lung abscess produces blood-streaked sputum resulting from bronchial ulceration, necrosis, and granulation tissue. Common associated findings include a cough with large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling sputum; a fever with chills; diaphoresis; anorexia; weight loss; a headache; weakness; dyspnea; pleuritic or dull chest pain; and clubbing. Auscultation reveals tubular or cavernous breath sounds and crackles. Percussion reveals dullness on the affected side.
Lung cancer.Ulceration of the bronchus commonly causes recurring hemoptysis (an early sign), which can vary from blood-streaked sputum to blood. Related findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, a fever, anorexia, weight loss, wheezing, and chest pain (a late symptom).
Plague(Yersinia pestis).The pneumonic form of this acute bacterial infection can produce hemoptysis, a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency, along with the sudden onset of chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia.
Pneumonia.In up to 50% of cases, Klebsiella pneumonia produces dark brown or red (currant jelly) sputum, which is so tenacious that the patient has difficulty expelling it from his mouth. This type of pneumonia begins abruptly with chills, a fever, dyspnea, a productive cough, and severe pleuritic chest pain. Associated findings may include cyanosis, prostration, tachycardia, decreased breath sounds, and crackles.
Pneumococcal pneumonia causes pinkish or rusty mucoid sputum. It begins with sudden, shaking chills; a rapidly rising temperature; and, in over 80% of cases, tachycardia and tachypnea. Within a few hours, the patient typically experiences a productive cough along with severe, stabbing, pleuritic pain. The agonizing chest pain leads to rapid, shallow, grunting respirations with splinting. Examination reveals respiratory distress with dyspnea and accessory muscle use, crackles, and dullness on percussion over the affected lung. Malaise, weakness, myalgia, and prostration accompany a high fever.
Pulmonary edema.Severe cardiogenic or noncardiogenic pulmonary edema commonly causes frothy, blood-tinged pink sputum, which accompanies severe dyspnea, orthopnea, gasping, anxiety, cyanosis, diffuse crackles, a ventricular gallop, and cold, clammy skin. This life-threatening condition may also cause tachycardia, lethargy, cardiac arrhythmias, tachypnea, hypotension, and a thready pulse.
Pulmonary embolism with infarction.Hemoptysis is a common finding in pulmonary embolism with infarction, a life-threatening disorder, although massive hemoptysis is infrequent. Typical initial symptoms are dyspnea and anginal or pleuritic chest pain. Other common clinical features include tachycardia, tachypnea, a low-grade fever, and diaphoresis. Less commonly, splinting of the chest, leg edema, and—with a large embolus—cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention may occur. Examination reveals decreased breath sounds, a pleural friction rub, crackles, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and signs of circulatory collapse (a weak, rapid pulse; hypotension), cerebral ischemia (transient loss of consciousness, seizures), and hypoxemia (restlessness and, particularly in elderly patients, hemiplegia and other focal neurologic deficits).
Pulmonary hypertension (primary).With pulmonary hyperension, features generally develop late. Hemoptysis, exertional dyspnea, and fatigue are common. Angina-like pain usually occurs with exertion and may radiate to the neck but not to the arms. Other findings include arrhythmias, syncope, a cough, and hoarseness.
Pulmonary TB.Blood-streaked or blood-tinged sputum commonly occurs in pulmonary TB; massive hemoptysis may occur in advanced cavitary TB. Accompanying respiratory findings include a chronic productive cough, fine crackles after coughing, dyspnea, dullness on percussion, increased tactile fremitus, and possible amphoric breath sounds. The patient may also develop night sweats, malaise, fatigue, a fever, anorexia, weight loss, and pleuritic chest pain.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).In 50% of patients with SLE, pleuritis and pneumonitis cause hemoptysis, a cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and crackles. Related findings are a butterfly rash in the acutephase, nondeforming joint pain and stiffness, photosensitivity, Raynaud's phenomenon, seizures or psychoses, anorexia with weight loss, and lymphadenopathy.
Tracheal trauma.Torn tracheal mucosa may cause hemoptysis, hoarseness, dysphagia, neck pain, airway occlusion, and respiratory distress.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.Lung or airway injury from bronchoscopy, laryngoscopy, mediastinoscopy, or lung biopsy can cause bleeding and hemoptysis.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Stridor:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Airway trauma.Local trauma to the upper airway commonly causes acute obstruction, resulting in the sudden onset of stridor. Accompanying this sign are dysphonia, dysphagia, hemoptysis, cyanosis, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachypnea, progressive dyspnea, and shallow respirations. Palpation may reveal subcutaneous crepitation in the neck or upper chest.
Anaphylaxis.With a severe allergic reaction, upper airway edema and laryngospasm cause stridor and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress: nasal flaring, wheezing, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and dyspnea. The patient may also develop nasal congestion and profuse, watery rhinorrhea. Typically, these respiratory effects are preceded by a feeling of impending doom or fear, weakness, diaphoresis, sneezing, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Common associated findings include chest or throat tightness, dysphagia and, possibly, signs of shock, such as hypotension, tachycardia, and cool, clammy skin.
Anthrax (inhalation).Initial signs and symptoms of anthrax are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by stridor, fever, dyspnea, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Hypocalcemia.With hypocalcemia, laryngospasm can cause stridor. Other findings include paresthesia, carpopedal spasm, and positive Chvostek's and Trousseau's signs.
Inhalation injury.Within 48 hours after inhalation of smoke or noxious fumes, the patient may develop laryngeal edema and bronchospasms, resulting in stridor. Associated signs and symptoms include singed nasal hairs, orofacial burns, coughing, hoarseness, sooty sputum, crackles, rhonchi, wheezes, and other signs and symptoms of respiratory distress, such as dyspnea, accessory muscle use, intercostal retractions, and nasal flaring.
Mediastinal tumor.Commonly producing no symptoms at first, a mediastinal tumor may eventually compress the trachea and bronchi, resulting in stridor. Its other effects include hoarseness, a brassy cough, a tracheal shift or tug, dilated neck veins, swelling of the face and neck, stertorous respirations, and suprasternal retractions on inspiration. The patient may also report dyspnea, dysphagia, and pain in the chest, shoulder, or arm.
Retrosternal thyroid.Retrosternal thyroid causes stridor, dysphagia, cough, hoarseness, and tracheal deviation. It can also cause signs of thyrotoxicosis.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.Bronchoscopy or laryngoscopy may precipitate laryngospasm and stridor.
Foreign body aspiration.Sudden stridor is characteristic in foreign body aspiration, a life-threatening situation. Related findings include an abrupt onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing; gagging or choking; hoarseness; tachycardia; wheezing; dyspnea; tachypnea; intercostal muscle retractions; diminished breath sounds; cyanosis; and shallow respirations. The patient typically appears anxious and distressed.
Treatments.After prolonged intubation, the patient may exhibit laryngeal edema and stridor when the tube is removed. Aerosol therapy with epinephrine may reduce stridor. Reintubation may be necessary in some cases. Neck surgery, such as thyroidectomy, may cause laryngeal paralysis and stridor.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Actinomycosis.Actinomycosis begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. A fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
Aspiration pneumonitis.Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy and, possibly, purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, a fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
Bronchiectasis.The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis; his sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, a recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis (chronic).Bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis.Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, a fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Common cold.When the common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications include a dry hacking cough, sneezing, a headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious, mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, a sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Lung abscess (ruptured).The cardinal sign of a ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, a fever with chills, dyspnea, a headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
Lung cancer.One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, a fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Nocardiosis.Nocardiosis causes a productive cough (with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum) and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, malaise, fatigue, weight loss, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion.
North American blastomycosis.North American blastomycosis is a chronic disorder that produces coughing that's dry and hacking or produces bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, a fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Plague(Yersinia pestis).The pneumonic form of plague may be contracted from person-to-person through direct contact via the respiratory system or through biological warfare from aerosolization and inhalation of the organism. The onset is usually sudden with chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia.Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, a high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Mycoplasma pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. Typically, however, a nonproductive cough starts 2 or 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, a fever, and a sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles, but generally don't appear seriously ill.
Psittacosis.As psittacosis progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly, with chills, a fever, a headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe infection may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis.Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with a fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, a sore throat, a headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
Pulmonary edema.Severe, pulmonary edema, which is a life-threatening disorder, causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea; paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea; and coughing, which may be nonproductive initially. Others include a fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a ventricular gallop. As the patient's respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and a productive cough, anxiety, restlessness, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism.Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less-common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB).Pulmonary TB causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis.A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Tracheobronchitis.Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later—following the onset of chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness—becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests (PFTs) may increase productive coughing.
Drugs.Expectorants increase productive coughing. These include ammonium chloride, calcium iodide, guaifenesin, iodinated glycerol, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Respiratory therapy.Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Aspiration of foreign body.Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, and then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis.Epiglottiditis is a life-threatening disorder that has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute).Also known as viral croup, laryngotracheobronchitisinitially produces a low to moderate fever, a runny nose, a poor appetite, and an infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, a barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Spasmodic croup.Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn't have a fever, but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Airway occlusion.Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient is gagging, wheezing, and hoarse, with stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds.
Anthrax (inhalation).Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhaling aerosolized spores. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include a fever, chills, weakness, a cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages, with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by a fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic).Aortic aneurysm causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, jugular vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor and, possibly, paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma.Asthma attacks typically occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing; this progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Atelectasis.As lung tissue deflates, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, and tachycardia. His skin may be cyanotic and diaphoretic, his breath sounds may be decreased, his chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
Avian influenza.Individuals infected with avian influenza may initially have symptoms of conventional influenza, including a nonproductive cough, fever, sore throat, and muscle aches. The most virulent avian virus, influenza A (H5N1), may lead to severe and life-threatening complications, such as acute respiratory distress and pneumonia.
Bronchitis (chronic).Bronchitis starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
Bronchogenic carcinoma.The earliest indicators of bronchogenic carcinoma can be a chronic, nonproductive cough; dyspnea; and vague chest pain. The patient may also be wheezing.
Common cold.The common cold generally starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progresses to some mix of sneezing, headaches, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea, myalgia, arthralgia, nasal congestion, and a sore throat.
Esophageal achalasia.In esophageal achalasia, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough. The patient may also have recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia.
Esophageal diverticula.The patient with esophageal diverticula has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
Esophageal occlusion.Esophageal occlusion is marked by immediate nonproductive coughing and gagging, with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain, dysphagia, and the inability to swallow.
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.A nonproductive cough is common in patients with Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, which is marked by noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. Other findings include a headache, myalgia, fever, nausea, and vomiting.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis.With hypersensitivity pneumonitis, an acute nonproductive cough, a fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 or 6 hours after exposure to an antigen.
Interstitial lung disease.A patient with interstitial lung disease has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss.
Laryngeal tumor.A mild, nonproductive cough is an early sign of a laryngeal tumor, in addition to minor throat discomfort and hoarseness. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and an earache may occur.
Laryngitis.In its acute form, laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient is swallowing or speaking) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
Lung abscess.Lung abscess typically begins with a nonproductive cough, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, a fever, a headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, bloody sputum.
Pleural effusion.A nonproductive cough along with dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include a pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Pneumonia.Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, a headache, a high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient's chest may be dull on percussion.
With mycoplasma pneumonia, a nonproductive cough arises 2 or 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, and a sore throat. The cough can be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. Fever commonly occurs, but the patient doesn't appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and a low-grade fever.
Pneumothorax.Pneumothorax is a life-threatening disorder that causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
Pulmonary edema.Pulmonary edema initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, a ventricular gallop, and anxiety and restlessness. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient's respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and coughing that produces frothy, bloody sputum.
Pulmonary embolism.A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough along with dyspnea and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. Typically, however, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and a low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
Sarcoidosis.With sarcoidosis, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, visual impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).SARS generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include a headache; malaise; a dry, nonproductive cough; and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Tracheobronchitis (acute).Initially, tracheobronchitis produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough's onset. Rhonchi and wheezes are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and, possibly, bronchospasm, with severe wheezing and increased coughing.
Tularemia.Signs and symptoms of tularemia following inhalation of the organism include the abrupt onset of a fever, chills, a headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors and trigger coughing.
Treatments.Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Wheezing [Sibilant rhonchi]:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Anaphylaxis.Anaphylaxis can cause tracheal edema or bronchospasm, resulting in severe wheezing and stridor. Initial signs and symptoms include fright, weakness, sneezing, dyspnea, nasal pruritus, urticaria, erythema, and angioedema. Respiratory distress occurs with nasal flaring, accessory muscle use, and intercostal retractions. Other findings include nasal edema and congestion; profuse, watery rhinorrhea; chest or throat tightness; and dysphagia. Cardiac effects include arrhythmias and hypotension.
Aspiration pneumonitis.With aspiration pneumonitis, wheezing may accompany tachypnea, marked dyspnea, cyanosis, tachycardia, fever, productive (eventually purulent) cough, and pink, frothy sputum.
Asthma.Wheezing is an initial and cardinal sign of asthma. It's heard at the mouth during expiration. An initially dry cough later becomes productive with thick mucus. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expiration, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions, rhonchi, accessory muscle use, nasal flaring, and tachypnea. Asthma also produces tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Blast lung injury.Wheezing is a common symptom of blast lung injury, which is characterized by hypoxia and respiratory difficulty. The forceful blast wave that follows an explosive detonation can cause serious lung injury, including hemorrhage, contusion, edema, and tearing. In addition to wheezing, patients may exhibit chest pain, dyspnea, cyanosis, and hemoptysis. The diagnosis is confirmed by chest X-rays that show a classic “butterfly” pattern.
Bronchial adenoma.Bronchial adenoma produces unilateral, possibly severe wheezing. Common features are chronic cough and recurring hemoptysis. Symptoms of airway obstruction may occur later.
Bronchiectasis.With bronchiectasis, excessive mucus commonly causes intermittent and localized or diffuse wheezing. A copious, foul-smelling, mucopurulent cough is classic. It's accompanied by hemoptysis, rhonchi, and coarse crackles. Weight loss, fatigue, weakness, exertional dyspnea, fever, malaise, halitosis, and late-stage clubbing may also occur.
Bronchitis (chronic).Bronchitis causes wheezing that varies in severity, location, and intensity. Associated findings include prolonged expiration, coarse crackles, scattered rhonchi, and a hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other effects include dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, clubbing, edema, weight gain, and cyanosis.
Bronchogenic carcinoma.Obstruction from bronchogenic carcinoma may cause localized wheezing. Typical findings include a productive cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis (initially blood-tinged sputum, possibly leading to massive hemorrhage), anorexia, and weight loss. Upper extremity edema and chest pain may also occur.
Emphysema.Mild to moderate wheezing may occur with emphysema. Related findings include dyspnea, tachypnea, diminished breath sounds, peripheral cyanosis, pursed-lip breathing, anorexia, and malaise. Accessory muscle use, barrel chest, a chronic productive cough, and clubbing may also occur.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis.Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis may cause wheezing and rhonchi along with cough, fever, chills, pleuritic chest pain, headache, weakness, malaise, anorexia, and macular rash.
Pulmonary edema.Wheezing may occur with pulmonary edema, a life-threatening disorder. Other signs and symptoms include coughing, exertional and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea and, later, orthopnea. Examination reveals tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a diastolic gallop. Severe pulmonary edema produces rapid, labored respirations; diffuse crackles; a productive cough with frothy, bloody sputum; arrhythmias; cold, clammy, cyanotic skin; hypotension; and thready pulse.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).Individuals infected with RSV commonly develop wheezing and other symptoms within 4 to 6 days of exposure to this virus. Healthy adults and children older than age 3 usually have mild cases of RSV and experience wheezing along with other common cold-like symptoms of runny nose, cough, and low-grade fever. In children ages 3 and younger, high-pitched expiratory wheezing can accompany a severe cough, rapid breathing, and high-grade fever.
Tracheobronchitis.With tracheobronchitis, auscultation may detect wheezing, rhonchi, and crackles. The patient also has a cough, slight fever, sudden chills, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness.
Wegener's granulomatosis.Wegener's granulomatosis may cause mild to moderate wheezing if it compresses major airways. Other findings include a cough (possibly bloody), dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, hemorrhagic skin lesions, and progressive renal failure. Epistaxis and severe sinusitis are common.
Other causes
Foreign body aspiration. Partial obstruction by a foreign body produces sudden onset of wheezing and possibly stridor; a dry, paroxysmal cough; gagging; and hoarseness. Other findings include tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds and, possibly, cyanosis. A retained foreign body may cause inflammation leading to fever, pain, and swelling.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough - Case 4-2: 7-Week-Old Boy:
I. Differential Diagnosis
(Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas)
The causes of a chronic cough in an infant are diverse, but the most common
causes are viral infections. In infants with a history of conjunctivitis,
C. trachomatis should be considered. B. pertussis can occur in infants and produce a chronic cough. Most often, infants are unable
to generate the force necessary for the classic
“whoop.” Certainly, other bacterial pneumonias should be considered with the lobar
infiltrate noted on chest roentgenogram in this case. Finally, GER must always
be considered a common cause for cough in infancy. Other, less common causes of
cough in this age group include congenital malformations including
tracheoesophageal fistulas, tracheobronchomalacia, vascular rings, lobar
emphysema, bronchogenic cyst, pulmonary sequestration, laryngeal cleft, and
airway hemangiomas.
Congestive heart failure should always be considered, with common etiologies in
infancy being volume overload (patent ductus arteriosus, truncus arteriosus,
ventricular septal defect, common atrioventricular canal, total anomalous
pulmonary venous return), myocardial dysfunction (myocarditis, Kawasaki
syndrome, anomalous left coronary artery), arrhythmias (supraventricular
tachycardia), pressure overload (coarctation of the aorta, aortic stenosis),
and secondary causes (hypertension, sepsis).
The features of this case that prompted additional evaluation were cardiomegaly
and increased vascular markings noted on the chest roentgenogram, presence of a
heart murmur, and biventricular hypertrophy seen on the ECG.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas, 2003
Cough - Case 4-3: 7-Month-Old Girl:
I. Differential Diagnosis
(Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas)
Viral infections are the most common cause of a cough in infancy, with
respiratory syncytial virus, adenovirus, and influenza and parainfluenza
viruses among the leading agents. In infancy, these viruses also commonly
produce lower airways disease, so that bronchiolitis quite often accompanies
the cough. Infants with bronchiolitis have decreased aeration with diffuse
rales and wheezing appreciated on auscultation. Fever is common, as is profuse
rhinorrhea.
Other infectious etiologies are possible and should always be considered in the
differential diagnosis; they include
C. trachomatis, pertussis, and bacterial pneumonia. Less commonly, infants present with
pulmonary tuberculosis or a fungal infection. Rarely, infectious entities such
as measles or parasitic infections manifest with cough.
Although cough can be the presenting symptom in many cases of congenital
malformations, this case strongly suggests an infectious etiology. The features
of this case that prompted additional evaluation included the rash and the
associated respiratory findings.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas, 2003
Cough - Case 4-6: 4-Month-Old Boy:
I. Differential Diagnosis
(Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas)
A cough in infancy is most likely related to an infectious process, with viral
processes the leading causes. Respiratory syncytial virus is a common cause of
cough. However, other infectious etiologies should always be considered. Even
with good adherence to vaccine regimens, bacterial infections such as
B. pertussis are possible in infants. M. pneumoniae infections also occur rarely in infants.
Reactive airways disease, most often secondary to viral infection, is also a
common cause of cough in infancy. GER should be considered as well, even if
gastrointestinal symptoms are few.
Less common causes for cough in infancy include congenital malformations such as
tracheoesophageal fistula, tracheobronchomalacia, vascular rings, lobar
emphysema, bronchogenic cysts, pulmonary sequestration, laryngeal cleft, and
cystic adenomatoid malformation. Furthermore, one should attempt to elicit a
history for any possible swallowing disorder that might lead to recurrent
aspiration.
Other, less common causes of cough in infancy include CF, congestive heart
failure, interstitial pneumonitis, and congenital immunodeficiencies.
This patient's history is suggestive of an infectious etiology, because he was in good health
until approximately 1 one week before presentation. However, his history of
prematurity should add one more disease to the differential diagnosis:
bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Such patients are also more likely to develop
reactive airways disease in response to a viral infection.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas, 2003
Cough:
Cough - pathophysiology
(The 5-Minute Pediatric Consult)
Cough is a symptom of a variety of underlying conditions, which results from a complex reflex phenomenon initiated by cough receptors and mediated in the brainstem’s cough center. These receptors are located throughout the large- to medium-sized airways (but not the lower airways), pharynx, paranasal sinuses, external auditory canal, and stomach, and are triggered by thermal, chemical, mechanical, or inflammatory stimuli. The resultant high-velocity expiration, which removes airway secretions, is generally reflexive, but may sometimes be voluntarily initiated or suppressed.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The 5-Minute Pediatric Consult, 2008
When you have watery eyes, a runny nose, congestion and sneezing, how can you tell if it's a cold or an allergy? Find out the difference and the...
Sneezing in the sitting room? Coughing in the kitchen? Many common allergens occur primarily indoors and can make your life miserable. Join our panel...
Heart trouble may sound like a click away if you have mitral valve prolapse (MVP). But this common misfiring in the heart is seldom serious. Learn...
Adults may already know the new ways to avoid catching and spreading the flu. But you may need to teach these behaviors to kids. Listen to an...
See full list of 6 related videos
» Next page: Risk Factors for Cough
Rate This Website
What do you think about the features of this website?
Take our user survey and have your say:
Website User Survey
Medical Tools & Articles:
Next articles:
Tools & Services:
Medical Articles:
Forums & Message Boards
- Ask or answer a question at the Boards: