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			 Researchers examined data on 839 children treated for acute 
			respiratory illnesses and found roughly three in four kids had a 
			cough one week later. And after 28 days, one in four children had a 
			chronic cough. 
			 
			“Parents should seek advice if children have a cough lasting more 
			than four weeks that is not getting any better, particularly if it 
			is a wet cough (moist or gurgly sounding cough),” lead study author 
			Dr. Kerry-Ann O’Grady of the Queensland University of Technology in 
			Australia said by email. 
			 
			There are many causes of chronic cough in kids, but the most common 
			culprit is lung disorders, said senior study author Dr. Anne Chang, 
			also of Queensland University of Technology. 
			
			  
			“In most children in the study, the cause of the chronic cough was 
			an underlying lung infection that is easily treated with 
			antibiotics, a condition called protracted bacterial bronchitis,” 
			Chang said by email. “However, most children with cough do not need 
			antibiotics.” 
			 
			All of the kids in the study were seen at a pediatric emergency 
			department in Brisbane, Australia. 
			 
			Half were at least 2.3 years old, although they ranged in age from 
			less than one month to almost 15 years. 
			 
			The children were followed weekly during the study and examined by a 
			pediatric lung specialist after 28 days. 
			 
			Among the 171 children who still had a cough at the end of the 
			study, 59, or 35 percent, had a wet cough, while 45, or 26 percent, 
			had a dry cough, researchers report in the Archives of Disease in 
			Childhood. (In the rest, the cough was either variable, or the data 
			were missing.) 
			 
			Pulmonologists identified a new and serious chronic lung disease in 
			36 children, and 55 had protracted bacterial bronchitis. 
			 
			The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether 
			or how an acute respiratory infection might lead to a chronic cough 
			or a lung disorder. It’s also possible that at least some of the 
			kids had a lung condition prior to their initial visit to the 
			emergency department with a respiratory illness. 
			
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			However, chronic cough is a common health problem for kids that is 
			usually treatable and can cause serious complications if it’s not 
			properly diagnosed and treated, said Dr. Andre Schultz, a 
			pulmonologist at Princess Margaret Hospital for Children in Perth, 
			Australia, who wasn’t involved in the study. 
			 
			“Chronic cough that is left untreated can result in permanent lung 
			damage,” Schultz said by email. 
			 
			Bacterial infections, for example, can cause progressive damage to 
			the lungs and eventually permanent scarring if children don’t 
			receive proper treatment,” Schultz said. This type of infection is 
			often the culprit of chronic wet coughs when kids don’t have asthma. 
			“Respiratory infections could also be an indication of an underlying 
			lung disease not yet diagnosed,” said Dr. Lilly Verhagen, a 
			researcher at Wilhelmina Children's Hospital in Utrecht, The 
			Netherlands, who wasn’t involved in the study. 
			 
			Because the study only included kids treated in the emergency 
			department for respiratory problems, the results might not be the 
			same for all kids treated by primary care providers, Verhagen, said 
			by email. 
			 
			But parents should still be aware that a chronic cough needs to be 
			checked out, Verhagen said. 
			
			  
			“If a child has a persistent cough lasting at least four weeks after 
			a respiratory infection that was severe enough to require a hospital 
			visit, parents should return for physician review and consideration 
			of underlying lung disease,” Verhagen advised. 
			 
			SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2vFZDP6 Archives of Disease in Childhood, 
			online August 16, 2017. 
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