17 answers

Asthma? Allergies? Chronic Cough--2 Year Old

My 2 year old daughter developed a cold in early April that turned into a cough that lasted a month that would get worse at night. I kept calling the nurse line and they just said to wait it out. I finally brought her in to see the Dr. in early May and the doctor said it was either a sinus infection or Asthma (she also has nut allergies and the two go hand in hand apparently). She said to try a round of amoxicillan to rule out infection and if that didn't work, to bring her back and they'd try a nebulizer and steroids. She also had a chest x-ray that came back clear.

Well, she got better within 3 days and was perfectly well for about 12 days and then the cold came back (or new cold?) with runny nose and again a cough that got worse at night. I called the nurse line again last week and they said to wait over the weekend and see if it got worse. Well, it got so bad that we ended up in Urgent Care on Monday and I was sure they would put her on another course of antibiotics...instead the doctor (a very young doctor) insisted that it was seasonal allergies and put her on Zyrtec and basically said that my pediatrician was incompetent and she couldn't believe that wasn't done in the first place. She also insisted that she would get better within 3 days.

Now 3 days have gone by and no change!!!! I don't know what to do! We have another appointment tomorrow with her regular pediatrician but I'm wondering if anybody else has experienced an episode like this with their young child or if anybody has a child with asthma and if so, what their symptoms were like or what tests were run to determine the cause of coughing. There is no wheezing. We're just frustrated because this is going on 2 months now and a lot of sleepless nights.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you so much for everybody's response! Sounds like we have a common issue. Her pediatrician thinks that it's not allergies and it's a cold turn into sinus infection, that she needs some stronger antibiotics and put her on a three week course of augmentin, so we'll try it out and see what happens. If it doesn't get better I will take the suggestion to see a specialist and meanwhile try warm liquids, raising the mattress, HEPA filter, etc.

THANKS MOMS!!!!!

Featured Answers

As others have said, it sounds similar to my son's cough-induced asthma. He was diagnosed at age 2. If you haven't already seen a specialist, I would recommend you see a pediatric pulmonologist and/or pediatric allergist. They can give you much more information. My son sees a pediatric pulmonologist I highly recommend; he and his colleagues have offices in Minneapolis, St. Paul and Minnetonka. Let me know if you need a recommendation. Good luck.

With a simple blood test for blood cell count should show if it is an infection or if it is needing antibodic.

If the coughing is worse at night, prop up her head more, coughing usually does get worse at night whether it is asthma or a cold. I use to take my son and daughter who both have asthma, outside when they would have coughing. If it cleared it up it was more asthmatic, also caffine would help with breathing, so some warm tea or even a bit of coffee would help breathing if it were asthma. I use to keep Mt Dew on hand when we would go camping so if there was too much trouble, it would help some until we got back to town.

You might clear his room of stuffed animals and other dust collectors. Also put a air cleaner or even a humidifier in there if it is really dry.

More Answers

My daughter had the same thing, a cough for 2 months...and then a pediatrician I work with decided to give her an inhaler to use. It really helped and after a couple days, the cough was better. We also have her on Zyrtec but it makes her tired. Usually you can't tell if a child's symptoms are asthma until they are at least the age of your child. It could be that since she has the nut allergy but interesting she doesn't wheeze. Either way, with the allergies she already has, Zyrtec or Claritin couldn't hurt since she probablly has other allergies too.

1 mom found this helpful

She seems to have a relapse.
Usually they recommend an inhaler.
Make sure it is not Bronchitis or something...

"wheezing" in a child per asthma, is not always present.
The asthma symptoms in a child, is different sometimes.

Claritin, is fine.
Zyrtec is similar.... but not all antihistimines work for everyone... thus, some people take Claritin, some take Zyrtec. Each person being different.

If she has a sinus infection.... there will be post-nasal drip... down the throat. It can sometimes then, cause a lung infection.... because of the mucous. I had that happen to me before. I have Asthma as well. In my case, it turned into a bronchitis and then Pneumonia. All started by a head-cold.

"Coughing" can be caused by 2 things:
1) a head-cold... because post-nasal drip causes coughing and throat irritation
2) a lung/chest cold or infection.
Thus, a "cough" does not always indicate that the origin is the chest, per say.

Her cough is probably worse at night because she is laying down... thus, the mucous just sits there and gets stuck in her throat.

Watch her and make sure she does not have any fever. A fever would indicate an infection or a secondary infection....

Yes, take her to the Doctor again.

all the best,
Susan

1 mom found this helpful

She could have what is called 'cough induced asthma'. There is no wheezing present with it. My son had this at the same age as your daughter. Colds and illness would trigger it and he would cough and cough and cough well beyond the run of the illness. The doctor finally diagnosed cough induced asthma and put him on an inhalor. Whenever the coughing would start, he would get a few inhalor treatments over the course of a day or two and the cough would go away and he would be fine. Allergies and asthma do often go hand in hand and they do run in my family very heavily. My son does not have allergies though, just the asthma. For someone as young as your daughter, they can also prescribe albuterol syrup, which is also used as a cough syrup. The doctor can tell by how well she responds to this if it is asthma or not as albuterol is also the medicine that is used in inhalors.

My daughter experienced a dry cough whenever she was coming down with or had an ear infection. Have here ears been checked?

Have you tried a cold air humidifer, raising the head of the mattress or pillow, saline nasal spray and local honey?

Sounds just like my son's cough induced asthma. A few times a year, usually spring and fall, though runny noses or colds always morph into a bad cough, too... which is horrible when he goes to bed...to the point that he cannot sleep. They have classified it as asthma, but there is never wheezing or asthma symptoms....just an awful cough that persists until we bust out the nebulizer - which clears it up immediately. For some reason asthma does tend to flare up during the night in kids. As long as we neb him immediately when he gets a cough...and supplement it with a children's allergy med we have no problems. I believe he will outgrow it as it started about 1 1/2 years old and seems to bother him less and less...though he sleeps next to a portable HEPA filter which has really helped!

We just went through the same thing with my son, but in the opposite order. The first and second Dr we saw insisted it was allergies and put him on Zyrtec and then switched it to Claritin after 3 weeks of the cough not getting better. I finally took him to a 3rd Dr who said it was a sinus infection and put him on Azithromycin (sp?) and that took care of the problem. Maybe she just needs something stronger than Amoxicillan. It probably was just from catching the cold again, or not quite being over it in the first place. The 3rd Dr asked if his eyes were itchy, and was he sneezing a lot. Both of those were a no for us, so that ruled out allergies.
Good Luck!

As others have said, it sounds similar to my son's cough-induced asthma. He was diagnosed at age 2. If you haven't already seen a specialist, I would recommend you see a pediatric pulmonologist and/or pediatric allergist. They can give you much more information. My son sees a pediatric pulmonologist I highly recommend; he and his colleagues have offices in Minneapolis, St. Paul and Minnetonka. Let me know if you need a recommendation. Good luck.

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