Elsevier

Respiratory Medicine

Volume 106, Issue 1, January 2012, Pages 138-144
Respiratory Medicine

Clinical and physiological features of postinfectious chronic cough associated with H1N1 infection

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2011.10.007Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Summary

Background

Post infectious chronic cough is a disabling illness. In 2009 an influenza pandemic occurred due to a novel strain of H1N1 influenza. Prolonged symptoms such as chronic cough remaining after the infection has cleared have not been examined. This study sought to investigate the prevalence, characteristics and mechanism of chronic cough following laboratory-confirmed H1N1 2009 influenza.

Methods

Out of 836 eligible patients who had been tested by PCR assay for H1N1, 136 responders participated. Nineteen underwent detailed clinical investigation of cough, and airway function using symptom questionnaires, hypertonic saline challenge, and cough monitoring.

Results

Post H1N1 chronic cough was reported by 43%, and chronic cough after non-H1N1 infection was present in 36% of participants. In the participants who progressed to testing objectively measured cough frequency was 3 times greater; there was a 9-fold increase in cough reflex sensitivity and greater quality of life impairment in the participants with postinfectious chronic cough following H1N1 infection than for the participants with no cough following H1N1 infection and for the healthy controls.

Conclusions

This study reports the first evaluation of chronic cough following H1N1 infection. Patients that develop chronic cough after H1N1 infection display increased cough reflex sensitivity up to 220 days after confirmed infection. There is an absence of associated risk factors and less impairment in quality of life compared to those patients normally seen in a specialist cough clinic. The associated mechanism was found to be cough reflex hypersensitivity.

Trial Registration

This clinical trial has been registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Register, ACTRN12610000540011.

Keywords

Postinfectious chronic cough
H1N1 influenza infection
Cough reflex hypersensitivity

Abbreviations

ACE-I
Angiotensin–converting enzyme Inhibitor
ARI
Acute Respiratory Illness
CRS
Cough Reflex Sensitivity
DRS
Dose Response Slope
EAHR-DRS
Extrathoracic Airway Hyperresponsiveness-Dose Response Slope
GORD
Gastro Oesophageal Reflux Disease
IQR
InterQuartile Range
LCQ
Leicester Cough Questionnaire
LDQ
Laryngeal Dysfunction Questionnaire
UTCPDCUM15Coughs
Urge to Cough at provocation dose causing cumulative 15 coughs
Snot-20
20-item sino-nasal outcome test
VAS
Visual Analogue Scale

Cited by (0)