DEAR DR. ROACH: Cough seems to be going around here in the Northwest. My wife has coughed excessively for months now. She was given hydrocodone-homatropine syrup for a month, but the doctor won’t re-prescribe it. So now my wife takes many OTC cough syrups and suppressants, plus nighttime cold formulas. None of them does anything, and she continues to cough, losing sleep and feeling worn out all day. She takes allergy meds also. What can be done? — J.A.C.

ANSWER: Cough is a symptom of several possible conditions. When people have a cough for a few days, usually it is due to an infection. Typically this is a viral upper-respiratory infection. Sometimes it is bacterial or, more concerning, pneumonia (which is a lower-respiratory infection, but it’s almost never called that).

Cough that has gone on for months should make her doctor consider other possibilities. Instead of treating the symptom (cough), the doctor should be looking for the underlying cause. This is better than re-prescribing powerful cough suppressants.

The common causes of chronic cough depend on the person. If your wife were a smoker, then chronic bronchitis — a type of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease — would be most likely. If she were taking a type of blood pressure medication called an ACE inhibitor, such as lisinopril, that would be a likely culprit. In someone with no particular risks, I think first about gastroesophageal reflux disease, asthma and postnasal drip.

GERD usually shows up as heartburn. Many people have no stomach complaints but do have a cough (the vagus nerve is involved with both the cough reflex and the nerve supply to the stomach and esophagus). Physicians first will try a powerful antacid medication, such as omeprazole, as a diagnostic test. If the medicine stops the cough, it’s suggestive that the cause of the cough was GERD. Other times, an endoscopy or direct pH monitoring of the esophagus will make the diagnosis.

Similarly, asthma usually has wheezing, but cough-variant asthma is not at all uncommon. Again, a doctor might have her try an inhaler as a diagnostic test. Formal pulmonary function testing is the definitive way to make the diagnosis of asthma, but the doctor may need to include a trial of methacholine, a substance that can trigger asthma symptoms in people so disposed.

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Since your wife seems to have allergies, postnasal drip is a likely cause, and a careful exam sometimes will show it. An ENT doctor can look endoscopically, or a different kind of medication (I often try nasal steroids) might help.

These are not the only causes. There are lung conditions, including unusual chronic infections (tuberculosis, M. avium and others) and even lung tumors, that should be evaluated by X-ray or even CT scan in the right circumstances.

DEAR DR. ROACH: In a recent column, you recommended that the person keep taking a statin for his cholesterol in spite of the negative side effect of higher blood sugar. I went off a statin (Zocor) several years ago for side effects, and I now take niacin. It has kept my cholesterol in the acceptable range since I stopped the Zocor.

Are you aware of this treatment, or do you think this is not a good treatment for cholesterol, since you did not mention that as an alternative? — C.R.

ANSWER: I seldom prescribe niacin. Although it also can increase blood sugar, the main reason I don’t prescribe it is that despite improving cholesterol, it has little (if any) effect on preventing heart attacks or making people live longer. Statins are well-proven to do so, and other medicines (ezetimibe, PCSK9 inhibitors) have some evidence of benefit. I consider niacin to be a third-line agent.

READERS: The booklet on stroke explains this condition that is deservedly feared by all. Readers can obtain a copy by writing:

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Dr. Roach

Book No. 902

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Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but will incorporate them in the column whenever possible. Readers may email questions to ToYourGoodHealth@med.cornell.edu or request an order form of available health newsletters at 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803. Health newsletters may be ordered from www.rbmamall.com.

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