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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Diagnostic yield of oesophageal pH monitoring in patients with chronic unexplained cough

, MD, &
Pages 13-19 | Received 29 May 2007, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Objective. One of the main causes of persistent cough is gastro-oesophageal reflux. In these patients, excessive oesophageal acid exposure and/or a temporal association between gastro-oesophageal reflux and cough can be demonstrated during 24-h pH monitoring. Impedance pH monitoring may have a higher yield than pH monitoring alone, but this technique is not yet widely available. The aim of this study was to assess the diagnostic yield of ambulatory 24-h oesophageal pH monitoring for the evaluation of chronic unexplained cough. Material and methods. Twenty-four-hour pH monitoring studies were analysed in 55 patients with chronic cough. In 14 of these studies concurrent ambulatory pressure monitoring was done. A cough episode was considered to be related to reflux if the cough occurred within two minutes after the onset of the reflux episode (“reflux–cough sequence”). Temporal relationships between cough and reflux were expressed by using the symptom association probability (SAP). Results. Thirty-seven patients actually coughed during the 24-h study. Eleven patients (20%) had a positive SAP for the reflux–cough sequence. In 5 patients, reflux followed coughing. Pathological oesophageal acid exposure was found in 15 subjects. Interestingly, only a minority (39.2%) of the cough bursts detected manometrically were marked by patients who had undergone both combined 24-h pH and pressure recording. Conclusions. This study shows that, in a routine clinical setting, combined 24-h pH and pressure monitoring is useful in the evaluation of patients with chronic unexplained cough, as positive findings are not infrequently found and have diagnostic and therapeutic consequences.

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