Significance of chronic cough as a defence mechanism or a symptom in elderly patients with aspiration and aspiration pneumonia
- S. Teramoto,
- T. Ishii,
- H. Yamamoto,
- Y. Yamaguchi,
- R. Namba,
- Y. Hanaoka,
- M. Takizawa,
- T. Okada,
- M. Ishii and
- Y. Ouchi
To the Editors:
In a recent issue of the European Respiratory Journal, Morice and the European Respiratory Society (ERS) Task Force committee members 1 comprehensively summarised the diagnosis and management of chronic cough in both adults and children. However, they have totally neglected the features, diagnosis and management of chronic cough in the elderly 1.
Although cough is one of the most common symptoms for which patients seek medical attention from primary care physicians and pulmonologists all over the world and is associated with deterioration in patients' quality of life 1, the concise and distinct guideline is not extensively introduced. Thus, the recent ERS Task Force report “The diagnosis and management of chronic cough” is very helpful and meaningful for chest physicians as well as primary care physicians. However, age-related changes in cough reflex and the protective roles of cough as the defence mechanism of aspiration in older patients are not argued in the report.
Palombini et al. 2 reported that asthma, postnasal drip syndrome (PNDS) and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GERD), alone or in combination, were responsible for ≥90% of the causes of chronic cough. They proposed that asthma, PNDS and GERD should be called a pathological triad in chronic cough in adults 2. However, in older patients, the causes of chronic cough may be more complicated. Age-related changes in cough reflex may affect the causes and therapeutic efficacy of chronic cough 3. Furthermore, the protective role of cough as the defence mechanism of aspiration is very important for the pathogenesis of chronic cough in older patients. Owing to the increasing number of the elderly in the population, many pulmonologists and geriatricians recognised that silent aspiration might be very important for the pathogenesis of aspiration pneumonia and nosocomial pneumonia in older patients 4–7. The prevalence of stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, sleep apnoea, gastro-oesophageal reflux, sedatives and/or hypnotics usage, post-gastrectomy and mechanical ventilation are increased in the aged population and these are believed to increase the risk of aspiration 4–7. As pneumonia is in principle prevented by the defence mechanisms, such as upper airway reflexes, mucociliary clearance and phagocytosis by alveolar macrophages, age-dependent declines of upper airway reflexes may be one of the pathophysiological features of aspiration pneumonia in older subjects. Elderly persons appear to have slowed clearance of particles from the airway probably due to impaired mucociliary function that accompanies ageing. However, in our experience, cough reflexes rather than swallowing reflex or mucociliary clearance are of the utmost importance for preventing aspiration in elderly patients. In fact, a markedly decreased cough reflex was observed in elderly patients with aspiration pneumonia 3, 4. Inversely, there is growing evidence that angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have beneficial effects on the prevention of pneumonia in elderly patients by improving both the impaired swallowing reflex and disturbed cough reflex 8, 9. Although the elevated levels of bradykinin and substance P by ACE inhibitors are thought to be the source of the cough, bradykinin and substance P play a role in setting the threshold for the cough and swallowing reflex in humans, resulting in reduction of the occurrence of pneumonia in the elderly. The beneficial effects of ACE inhibitors for older subjects with the risk of aspiration pneumonia should be widely noted 8, 9.
In addition, we have recently demonstrated that recurrent silent aspiration causes diffuse aspiration bronchiolitis (DAB), which is characterised as a chronic inflammation of bronchioles accompanying a foreign body reaction 3, 10. The patients with DAB mostly demonstrated signs of bronchorrhoea, cough, bronchospasm and dyspnoea in the case of food intake. The chronic cough in association with food intake is often misdiagnosed as bronchial asthma in the elderly. The chronic cough in DAB does not respond to β-adrenergic bronchodilators or to inhaled steroids. The swallowing rehabilitation and temporally i.v. alimentation are the most effective way to reduce the symptoms in DAB.
Although chronic cough is an untoward symptom in adults as well as elderly subjects, the protective roles of cough reflex on the development of aspiration pneumonia in older patients should be carefully considered by all physicians. Hopefully, the next European Respiratory Society Task Force report will include the clinical significance of chronic cough as a defence mechanism or a symptom in elderly patients with aspiration and aspiration pneumonia.
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