18
March 2023Cough
Cough is a common problem for which patients seek medical advice. Assessment of cough is important to distinguish benign from serious causes.
(list not exhaustive)
Acute cough
Infectious
Irritant
Other (e.g., initial presentation of a chronic cough etiology)
Subacute cough
Postinfectious
Cough variant asthma
Chronic cough
Upper respiratory tract
Pulmonary
Gastrointestinal (e.g., gastroesophageal reflux)
Cardiac
Other (e.g., medications, work-related exposure)
Given a patient with a cough, the candidate will diagnose the cause, severity, and complications, and will initiate an appropriate management plan. Particular attention should be paid to differentiating benign causes from more serious causes requiring full investigation and further management.
Given a patient with a cough, the candidate will
list and interpret critical clinical findings, including those derived from an appropriate history and physical examination aimed at
discriminating between acute, subacute, and chronic cough;
differentiating benign from more serious causes; and
identifying triggers and aggravating factors;
list and interpret critical investigations, including
appropriate imaging investigations;
pulmonary function testing; and
allergy testing; and
construct an initial management plan, including
determining if the patient requires specialized care;
prescribing appropriate medication;
counseling and educating the patient (e.g., if there is a need for antibiotics or investigations);
reassuring the patient if they do not require further investigation; and
advising the patient on work-related issues, if necessary.