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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study examined the relationships between subjective descriptors and objective airflow measures of
cough
. We hypothesized that coughs with specific airflow characteristics would share common subjective perceptual descriptions. Thirty clinicians (speech-language pathologists, otolaryngologists, and neurologists) perceptually evaluated ten
cough
audio samples with specific airflow characteristics determined by peak expiratory flow rate,
cough
expired volume,
cough
duration, and number of coughs in the
cough
epoch. Participants rated coughs by strength, duration, quality, quantity, and overall potential effectiveness for airway protection. Perception of
cough
strength and effectiveness was determined by the combination of presence of pre-expulsive compression phase, short peak expiratory airflow rate rise time, high peak expiratory flow rates, and high
cough
volume acceleration. Perception of
cough
abnormality was defined predominantly by descriptors of breathiness and strain.
Breathiness
was characteristic for coughs with either absent compression phases and relatively high expiratory airflow rates or coughs with significantly low expired volumes and reduced peak flow rates. In contrast, excessive strain was associated with prolonged compression phases and low expiratory airflow rates or the absence of compression phase with high peak expiratory rates. The study participants reached greatest agreement in distinguishing between single and multiple coughs. Their assessment of
cough
strength and effectiveness was less consistent. Finally, the least agreement was shown in determining the quality categories. Modifications of
cough
airflow can influence perceptual
cough
evaluation outcomes. However, the inconsistency of
cough
ratings among our participants suggests that a uniform
cough
rating system is required.
...
PMID:Analysis of Clinicians' Perceptual Cough Evaluation. 2711 59