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

Gastro-esophageal reflux disease (GERD) and postnasal drip syndrome (PNDS) are common causes of chronic cough. In patients with normal chest radiographs, GERD most likely causes cough by an esophageal-bronchial reflex. When GERD causes cough, there may be no gastrointestinal symptoms up to 75% of the time. While 24-h esophageal pH monitoring is the most sensitive and specific test in linking GERD and cough in a cause and effect relationship, it has its limitations. There is no general agreement on how to best interpret the test and it cannot detect non-acid reflux events. While some patients improve with minimal medical therapy, others require intensive regimens. Surgery may be efficacious when intensive medical therapy has failed. Because there are no pathognomonic findings of PNDS, the diagnosis is inferential and is based upon a combination of clinical findings, the results of ancillary testing, and the response to specific therapy. Specific therapy depends upon the rhinosinus disease(s) causing the PND. A common error in managing PNDSs is to assume that all H(1)-antagonists are equally efficacious. The second-generation, relatively non-sedating H(1)-antagonists have been found to be less effective than the first-generation agents in treating cough due to non-histamine-mediated PNDSs.
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PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of chronic cough due to gastro-esophageal reflux disease and postnasal drip syndrome. 1209 81

On systematic investigation, patients with persistent cough are often diagnosed as having asthma, gastro-oesophageal reflux (GOR) and post-nasal drip; often, there is no associated diagnosis. Cough-variant asthma and eosinophilic bronchitis are conditions presenting with cough, usually associated with airway eosinophilia and responding well to corticosteroids. These conditions including asthma are best grouped as 'eosinophil-associated cough'. Analysis of induced sputum for eosinophils is an important tool in the investigation of chronic persistent cough. Reliable ambulatory counters for cough have been developed and the contribution of cough count and intensity to the severity of cough have been partly evaluated, and used in assessing antitussive therapies. Self-scoring evaluations are still widely used, but the inclusion of quality of life tools specifically adapted to the evaluation of cough appears to be a useful tool that can directly measure the impact of chronic cough. We need a greater assessment and evaluation of all these tools.
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PMID:Assessment and measurement of cough: the value of new tools. 1209 81

All children cough, but most children are normal. In a child with isolated cough, a detailed history and examination, followed in a small number of cases by targeted investigations, should allow the child to be placed in one of five diagnostic categories. These are normal child; the child with a serious illness such as cystic fibrosis, tuberculosis etc. the child with non-serious, but treatable causes of cough and wheeze, for example gastro-oesophageal reflux or postnasal drip; the child with an asthma syndrome and an overestimation of symptoms for psychological or other reasons by either or both of child or family. Treatment is of the underlying condition if appropriate. Non-specific treatment with cough syrups are not useful. Attention to environmental factors such as active and passive smoking, and exposure to dust and pets is important. The diagnosis of cough variant asthma should only be made in older children after variable airflow obstruction and response to bronchodilator has been demonstrated physiologically. In younger children, rational diagnostic criteria are an abnormally increased cough, with no evidence of any non-asthma diagnosis, a clear-cut response to a therapeutic trial of asthma medication, usually moderate dose inhaled corticosteroids, and relapse on stopping medications with second response to recommencing them. Some such children go on to develop more typical asthma, with wheeze and bronchial hyper-reactivity. It is important however, not to over-diagnose asthma in children who in fact have a chronic non-specific cough. Such children require no treatment, get better with time, and have normal long-term lung function.
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PMID:Paediatric problems of cough. 1209 84

Gastroesophageal reflux is now a generally accepted risk factor for the development of adenocarcinoma of the esophagus. Less well known is the relationship of reflux disease (GERD) and respiratory disorders. Among the extra-esophageal manifestations of reflux disease is reflux laryngitis, which affects up to 78 patients with chronic hoarseness, Reinke's edema, laryngeal stricture, postnasal drip, asthma and non-cardiac chest pain. Despite popular opinion, changes in lifestyle (for example, cessation of smoking and drinking, avoidance of fatty foods) do not result in an improvement in symptoms. The treatment of choice for GERD is the use of proton pump inhibitors (PPI) in the form of stepdown therapy; in individual cases as symptom-orientated on-demand therapy.
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PMID:[Respiratory manifestations of reflux disease. Gastric acidity--poison for larynx, teeth and respiratory tract]. 1211 99

Eosinophilic bronchitis is a recently described condition in patients with chronic cough, sputum eosinophilia, normal spirometry and no evidence of bronchial hyperreactivity. The aim of the study was to assess the causes of chronic cough and to identify the prevalence of eosinophilic bronchitis as a cause of chronic cough. Thirty-six patients [mean age 45.4 +/- 14.3 years (range 16-69 years), M/F: 4/32] with an isolated chronic cough lasting for more than 4 weeks were recruited from the outpatient clinic. In all patients, after a full history and physical examination, blood eosinophil count, eosinophilic cationic protein (ECP), serum total and specific IgE levels were measured. Spirometry, methacholine provocation test, skin prick tests, ear, nose and throat examination, induction of sputum and esophageal pH testing were performed. The mean duration of cough was 31.3 +/- 52.3 months. Sputum eosinophilia greater than 3% was present in 12 (33.3%) patients and they were diagnosed as eosinophilic bronchitis. Their induced sputum had a mean eosinophil count of 8.3% and a mean ECP level of 98.5 mg x l(-1), which were higher than the others (P=0.003, both). The diagnosis of the remaining patients were postnasal drip syndrome in eight, gastroesophageal reflux disease in eight, post-infectious cough in two and cough-variant asthma in one patient. In conclusion, eosinophilic bronchitis is an important cause of chronic cough and should be considered in the assessment of patients before regarding them as having idiopathic chronic cough.
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PMID:Eosinophilic bronchitis as a cause of chronic cough. 1281 57

Chronic cough is a debilitating symptom for which patients commonly seek medical attention. Among adult non-smokers who are not taking an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and have a normal or near normal chest radiograph, postnasal drip syndrome caused by a variety of rhinosinus conditions, asthma and non-asthmatic eosinophilic bronchitis and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease singly or in combination, are the most common diagnoses underlying chronic cough. Pharmacotherapy for chronic cough can be either specific or non-specific. Specific therapy is preferable and the most effective as it is directed at the aetiologies and pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for cough. In contrast, non-specific therapy is used only in limited clinical settings, as it is directed at the symptom rather than underlying aetiologies and aims only to control, rather than eliminate cough.
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PMID:Pharmacotherapy of chronic cough in adults. 1283 32

Chronic cough is a common problem in patients who visit physicians. The three most common causes of persistence cough in nonsmokers who were not taking an ACE inhibitor and who had a normal or stable chest radiograph are: postnasal drip, asthma and gastroesophageal reflux. After a viral upper respiratory infection, it takes sometimes seven weeks for bronchial airway hyperreactivity to return to normal. By using a standard protocol, 95 percent of patients with chronic cough can be managed successfully but in some cases it may take even five months or more to determine a diagnosis and effective treatment.
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PMID:[Chronic cough--etiological diagnosis problems]. 1475 33

Patients with chronic cough should avoid exposure to irritants that can trigger cough, and those who smoke should stop smoking. Patients who develop chronic cough in association with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor therapy should be switched to an agent from another drug class. If cough persists, a chest radiograph should be ordered to rule out malignancy and other serious conditions. Postnasal drip syndrome, asthma, and gastroesophageal reflux disease are the most likely causes of chronic cough in adults. If postnasal drip syndrome is suspected, a trial of a decongestant and a first-generation antihistamine is warranted. Pulmonary function testing with a methacholine challenge is the preferred test for confirming the diagnosis of asthma. Gastroesophageal reflux disease usually is diagnosed based on the symptoms and after a trial of therapy. If the cause of chronic cough remains unclear, high-resolution computed tomographic scanning of the chest, bronchoscopy, and referral to a pulmonary specialist may be indicated. The approach to diagnosing chronic cough in immunocompromised patients and children is similar to the approach in immunocompetent adults. However, a CD4+ cell count can help determine the potential for opportunistic infections in immunocompromised patients. Respiratory tract infections, asthma, and gastroesophageal reflux disease are the most common causes of chronic cough in children. Foreign body aspiration should be considered in young children. Congenital conditions, cystic fibrosis, and immune disorders are possible diagnoses in children with chronic cough and recurrent infection.
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PMID:Evaluation of the patient with chronic cough. 1515 65

Postnasal drip, asthma and gastroesophageal reflux disease are the underlying causes in almost 90% of cases with chronic cough. Causal treatment is successful in the majority of patients, although in the event of a long-standing cough, it might need to be continued over several weeks. Smoking complicates the identification of cough as a clinical early symptom of an underlying tumor. Cardiac causes are rare, and in most cases are due to the use of ACE-inhibitors. Cough may be triggered by a variety of causes and the therapeutic palette must include several spectra. Since the individual causes often cannot be unequivocally identified, it may be necessary to take a polypragmatic therapeutic approach targeting the three most common causes simultaneously for 7-10 days.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis and treatment of chronic cough]. 1553 30

Cough is an essential protective mechanism for the airways and lungs. Cough receptors are situated in the larynx and tracheobronchial tree, and are mediated by rapidly-adapting (irritant) Adelta fibers, although other receptors such as C-fiber receptors may contribute. Cough plasticity and interactions of cough pathways may occur centrally to enhance the cough reflex. The presence of an increased cough reflex as measured by a tussive response to capsaicin or citric acid in patients with a chronic cough indicate that there is sensitisation of the cough reflex. The most common cause of acute cough is that after a common cold, which usually lasts for less than 2 weeks. Cough that persists longer may be due to asthma and its variant forms (cough variant asthma and eosinophilic bronchitis), rhinosinusitis (postnasal drip), gastro-esophageal reflux, bronchiectasis, chronic bronchitis, and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor therapy. Chronic persistent cough can contribute to a significant worsening of quality of life measures. Bronchial tumors must be excluded with a chest radiograph. The management of chronic cough includes investigation and treatment of any associated causes, which sometimes leads to control of cough. In a proportion of patients, cough may be idiopathic and remain uncontrolled. Currently-available antitussives such as dextromethorphan or codeine are modestly successful in controlling cough. New antitussives may be developed that act on the sensory receptors or prevent their sensitisation.
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PMID:Pathophysiology and therapy of chronic cough. 1582 40


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