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Query: UMLS:C0017168 (gastroesophageal reflux disease)
11,783 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A successful, systematic, anatomic, diagnostic protocol for evaluating patients with chronic cough was presented in 1981. To determine whether it was still valid, we prospectively evaluated, over a 22-month interval, 102 consecutive and unselected immunocompetent patients complaining of cough an average of 53 +/- 97 months (range, 3 wk to 50 yr). Utilizing the anatomic, diagnostic protocol modified to include prolonged esophageal pH monitoring (EPM), the causes of cough were determined in 101 of 102 (99%) patients, leading to specific therapy that was successful in 98%. Cough was due to one condition in 73%, two in 23%, and three in 3%. Postnasal drip syndrome was a cause 41% of the time, asthma 24%, gastroesophageal reflux (GER) 21%, chronic bronchitis 5%, bronchiectasis 4%, and miscellaneous conditions 5%. Cough was the sole presenting manifestation of asthma and GER 28 and 43% of the time, respectively. While history, physical examination, methacholine inhalational challenge (MIC), and EPM yielded the most frequent true positive results, MIC was falsely positive 22% of the time in predicting that asthma was the cause of cough. Laboratory testing was particularly useful in ruling out suspected possibilities. We conclude that the anatomic diagnostic protocol is still valid and that it has well-defined strengths and limitations.
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PMID:Chronic cough. The spectrum and frequency of causes, key components of the diagnostic evaluation, and outcome of specific therapy. 217 28

Globus pharyngeus and post-nasal drip are common patient complaints encountered in general otolaryngologic practice. Although these complaints have been traditionally ascribed to stress and sinusitis respectively, recently it has been suggested that they are secondary to gastroesophageal reflux, either by a direct effect on the pharynx and posterior larynx or by referred sensation along vagal pathways from the lower esophagus. This reflux could alter the motor tone of the laryngoesophagus and contribute to the pathogenesis of dysphonias. If globus and post-nasal drip are secondary to gastroesophageal reflux, then reduction of stomach pH should reduce the frequency and severity of these complaints. To test these hypotheses in a clinical setting, a large population of patients with vocal disorders was analyzed for the incidence of these complaints. Twenty healthy patients with globus and/or postnasal drip were then entered in a double-blind random placebo-controlled study to assay the efficacy of cimetidine in treating these complaints. No significant difference was found between cimetidine and placebo.
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PMID:A double-blind controlled study of the efficacy of cimetidine in the treatment of the cervical symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux. 219 5

Irwin and co-workers have designed an anatomic approach to the diagnosis and treatment of cough. In their hands, diagnosis was consistently determined and treatment successful almost without exception, if sustained. We reviewed the results of a similar approach in 139 consecutive and unselected patients referred to pulmonary specialists in two community hospitals. Thirty-nine patients demonstrated hyperreactive airways (HA) by carbachol inhalation and/or eucapnic hyperventilation of cold air. Twenty-seven of 78 without HA had postnasal drip, and 13 of 78 had a persistent cough following acute upper airway inflammation. Other less common diagnoses included chronic bronchitis, gastro-esophageal reflux, occupational bronchitis, interstitial lung disease, and psychologic causes. We were able to find the cause of cough 88 percent of the time. Treatment adjusted for noncompliance was not always a success. While all patients with HA improved, 8 percent of patients without HA or specific diagnosis did not have an improvement in their cough upon retrospective inquiry. Based on this analysis, we find that the diagnosis and treatment of cough may not be as successful as originally reported using Irwin's approach.
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PMID:Chronic persistent cough. Experience in diagnosis and outcome using an anatomic diagnostic protocol. 292

Using a diagnostic protocol based on the anatomy and distribution of cough receptors and afferent nerves, we sought to determine the causes and outcome of specific therapy of chronic persistent cough in 49 consecutive and unselected patients. A specific diagnosis was made in all. Cough was due to chronic postnasal dip from a variety of conditions in 29%, asthma in 25%, postnasal drip plus asthma in 18%, chronic bronchitis in 12%, gastroesophageal reflux in 10%, and miscellaneous disorders in 6%. History, physical examination, and methacholine inhalational challenge diagnosed disease in 86% of all patients. Adjusted success rates for specific therapy, and average of 4.4 and 18.9 months after therapy had been prescribed, were 98% and 97%, respectively. We concluded the following about chronic persistent cough; using an anatomic, diagnostic protocol, the cause can be consistently determined; postnasal drip and/or bronchial asthma are very common causes of cough; the outcome of specific therapy, almost without exception, is successful and sustained.
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PMID:Chronic persistent cough in the adult: the spectrum and frequency of causes and successful outcome of specific therapy. 722 53

Chronic cough is a common symptom presenting to all clinicians. Every effort should be made to determine the cause(s) of cough because specific therapy has a higher likelihood of success than empiric therapy. Evaluation begins with a complete history, physical examination, routine health screen laboratory testing, chest film, and pulmonary function testing. Further investigation should be guided by the response to treatment of the most likely diagnostic possibilities: postnasal drip, cough-variant asthma, gastroesophageal reflux, chronic bronchitis, bronchiectasis, and ACE inhibitor induced. The majority of each patient's workup can be performed and ordered by the primary care physician.
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PMID:Chronic cough. 787 96

Cough is one of the most prevalent symptoms of bronchopulmonary diseases. If cough persists ( > 6 weeks), further workup is mandatory. The most common causes of persistent cough in nonsmokers presenting with a normal CXR are postnasal drip due to chronic rhinitis-sinusitis, cough equivalent asthma or gastroesophageal reflux. The response to empirical therapy may confirm one of these etiologies. Other causes of chronic cough need further extensive workup involving radiologic, functional and endoscopic procedures.
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PMID:[Cough--work-up and therapy]. 852 38

The approach to patients with chronic cough has been well defined and evaluated in the literature through a number of prospective studies. Meticulous attention to detail of the afferent loop of the cough reflex has helped identify the cause of cough in most patients. The most common causes appear to be similar in both children and adults and include asthma, postnasal drip syndromes, gastroesophageal reflux diseases, and aspiration. In children, recurrent viral infections and infections with atypical organisms also are very prevalent. Specific therapy directed at the cause alleviates the cough in most patients. In some patients, there may be more than one cause of cough. Invasive testing (eg, bronchoscopy and esophageal pH probing) is rarely necessary. In patients in whom a specific cause cannot be identified or in whom cough modifiers are necessary while specific therapy is taking hold, antitussives of both the narcotic and nonnarcotic variety are helpful.
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PMID:Chronic persistent cough: diagnosis and treatment update. 864 27

The objective has been to identify the different etiologies and elaborate a diagnostic and therapeutical methodology for patients with chronic cough. During one year we studied prospectively 83 patients with persistent cough of daily appearance with an evolution of four or more weeks and no previous etiologic diagnosis. We worked on three diagnostic (D) levels. D1: Based on the anamnesis and physical examination. D2: Sequential incorporation of complementary exams. D3: Evaluation of the response to the specific treatment. We divided the population into 2 groups: G1 healthy children, G2 children followed in our hospital for different conditions. The mean age was 4.7 years (range, 3 months to 15 years), and the average duration of cough was 4.9 months (range, 1 to 36 months). In G1 the following causes were identified in 78 children: cough variant asthma 41 (52%), asthma+upper respiratory tract infections 8 (10%), asthma+lower respiratory tract infections 6 (7%), postnasal drip syndrome (sinusitis, adenoiditis) 5 (6%), psychogenic 6 (7%), undetermined 4 (5%), gastroesophageal reflux 2, asthma+cigarette 2, AIDS 1, Sjogren syndrome 1, vascular ring 1, cricopharyngeal foreign body 1. In G2 out of 5 children we have found: 2 children with chronic encephalopathies who had swallowing disorders and gastroesophageal reflux, 1 patient with Down syndrome presenting hypogammaglobulinemia and bronchiectasis, 1 tracheaesophageal fistula in H in a child with recurrent pneumonia, 1 lymphocytic pneumonia in an AIDS patient. The D1 was correct in 92% of the cases. The specific therapy has proved useful for achieving the remission of the symptoms. Although asthma is the most frequent cause of chronic cough, other etiologies exist and must be ruled out.
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PMID:[Chronic cough in pediatrics]. 872 72

The human cough reflex is still poorly understood, although it is known to occur independently of bronchoconstriction. Sensitization of the cough reflex is a unifying hypothesis for chronic dry cough in several conditions, including gastroesophageal acid reflux, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor cough, and cough-variant asthma. The most common cause of chronic dry cough is a group of related conditions of chronic rhinitis, sinusitis, and postnasal drip. In these cases the cough reflex may be sensitized through an action of inflammatory mediators from the nasal mucosa on the airways or a reflex sensitization of airway sensory nerves. The association of cough with gastroesophageal reflux may occur through a local esophageal-tracheobronchial reflex. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor cough is a side effect of treatment in about 10% of patients; it probably results from inhibition of the degradation of kinins, particularly bradykinin, in the airway. Why some patients with asthma have cough as the principal feature of their disease is unclear. Tachykinins are probably involved in the mechanism of sensitization of the cough reflex, and the development of neuropeptide antagonists may open new research opportunities. A study that used ambulatory recording of cough in a group of subjects with asthma confirmed the presence of significant cough, the frequency of which did not correlate with lung function or diurnal variation in peak flow. This finding highlights the problem of cough in patients with asthma, a problem that probably has been underestimated in the past.
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PMID:Pathophysiology and clinical presentations of cough. 893 82

Cough is one of the commonest symptoms of lung disease and is a frequent problem encountered in general practice as well as in hospital practice. A wide range of disease processes may present with cough and definitive treatment depends on making an accurate diagnosis of the cause. A diagnostic work-up for patients with persistent dry cough is presented. The most common associated conditions are post-viral cough, asthma, rhinosinusitis (post-nasal drip or 'nasal catarrh') and gastro-oesophageal reflux. Treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors can also lead to a persistent dry cough. Specific treatment of the cause should control the cough, but this may not occur in all cases and in a sizeable proportion of patients, no associated cause can be found. An increased sensitivity of the cough reflex can be observed in patients with persistent dry cough. Symptomatic relief must be considered when the cough interferes with the patient's health and sleep but the most effective antitussive opiates cause sedation and may be addictive. Treatment of persistent dry cough remains a challenge in some patients and there is still scope for improvement in its diagnosis and effective therapy.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of chronic persistent dry cough. 897 40


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