My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

Children's health

Cough cough cough that has lasted years in both children

41 replies

VanellopeVonSchweetz · 12/02/2013 07:40

Both ds and dd have had a cough that has lasted for years, it seems slightly worse in winter. It's the same cough in both children. It doesn't produce anything and wakes them and the rest of us up every night. Tried all the usual propping up, olbas oil, vicks (and on feet) , chopped onions on radiator, well ventilated room. GP prescribed us Betamethasone nasal drops and after a week that hasn't worked either. Booked in to see a Paediatrician but its a month away and I can't bear another month of no sleep. Any crazy / normal ideas welcome.

OP posts:
Report
purplerainbow · 12/02/2013 07:42

Have they not mentioned asthma? My 2 both have asthma, alwyas worse in winter and always worse at night. Now they are both on steroids and it is well controlled.

Report
VanellopeVonSchweetz · 12/02/2013 07:50

Thanks, Yes GP did offer an asthma inhaler but I was worried it might not be good for them. I forgot to mention DH had same cough as child but isn't now asthmatic. I was hoping there'd be another way to go with it.

OP posts:
Report
BeaWheesht · 12/02/2013 07:52

Night time coughing is very indicative of asthma. An inhaler would be very very likely to help.

Report
Sirzy · 12/02/2013 07:54

Why wouldn't it be good for them to have something which would help?

Report
Flisspaps · 12/02/2013 08:00

You were worried an inhaler might be bad for them, but have left them with possible asthma and a bowl of chopped onions (which have been found to have no beneficial effect or to magically "soak up' bacteria/viruses/germs) in their room?!

Am I reading that right?

Go back to the GP, see if the inhaler helps. My 9mo DS was prescribed one last week to help with his croup, I didn't think it might be bad, I thought 'great, that'll make it easier for him to breathe'!

Since then he's slept through 3 times (never before!)

Report
VanellopeVonSchweetz · 12/02/2013 08:00

Thanks, Yes, I get what you mean but it's a steroid isn't it. Couldn't it bring on a dependance to it. The GP seemed to rather flippantly hand it out rather than any test being done (not that I know what the tests would be).

OP posts:
Report
MonaLotte · 12/02/2013 08:01

As an asthma sufferer I really think you should get this checked out. It does sound like asthma a IMO. Especially the night coughing. Please take the inhalers if they have been prescribed. If it isn't asthma they wk t to any harm and at least you can rule it out. If it is asthma and it goes untreated it could end up in them having an asthma attack which is something you do not want them to to through.
Why do you think inhalers might not be good for them?

Report
MonaLotte · 12/02/2013 08:02

Won't do not wk t to!

Report
VanellopeVonSchweetz · 12/02/2013 08:02

Oh and yes I'd try any natural cure first over a steroid. Believe it or not the onions worked for two nights then not at all. Maybe a freakish coincidence I know it sounds crazy.

OP posts:
Report
Sirzy · 12/02/2013 08:04

Perhaps before dismissing sensible solutions in place of onions things you should have done some research or even asked the GP?

Initially they would likely be prescribed ventolin which isn't steroid based and is used to open the airways immediatly.

They may later be prescribed a preventative inhaler which is steroid based but the normal dose is quite low and the steroids are inhaled so very little enters the blood stream

Report
MonaLotte · 12/02/2013 08:04

It's not the same steroid as say an athlete would take. Also if its ventolin/ salbutamol (a blue inhaler) there are no steroids in it.

Report
MonaLotte · 12/02/2013 08:05

What sirzy said ^^

Report
Bumply · 12/02/2013 08:06

Q: What are steroids?
A: Some athletes misuse anabolic steroids to build muscle. Corticosteroids are the steroids used to treat asthma. Corticosteroids do not build muscle or enhance performance. Corticosteroids are hormones that you body naturally produces. When your doctor prescribes an inhaled corticosteroid, he is giving a very small amount of this same hormone, to reduce the inflammation in the airways.

Report
Flisspaps · 12/02/2013 08:06

So not at all then - just two nights without coughing is coincidental.

Asthma can be a killer. That's not being dramatic, that's a fact. Why would you not want to get your DC something proven to help? Something fast-acting? Something that might actually give then a decent nights sleep?

I'm all for a natural approach, but sometimes prescribed medication is the best thing.

Report
MonaLotte · 12/02/2013 08:07

I have had asthma since I was two. I have been taking steroid inhalers for nearly 30 years and am fine. I realise I'm just one person. But my asthma has always been bad (if not controlled) and without inhalers I don't know if I'd be here today.

Report
Pascha · 12/02/2013 08:10

Are you confusing inhaled steroids for asthma with anabolic steroids used by sportspeople? Although they belong to the same family of drugs they are worlds apart from each other.

Inhaled steroids mean the difference between not quite being able to breathe comfortably at night resulting in a cough, and free easy breathing making for a good nights sleep and happier healthier children. Struggling to breathe is horrible. If simple common medicine can make that better surely it's worth it?

Report
VanellopeVonSchweetz · 12/02/2013 08:33

Thanks for the schooling, I'll give the inhaler a try. I'll let you know how I get on in the morning.

OP posts:
Report
butterfingerz · 12/02/2013 11:48

Inhaled steroids as treatment for asthma is one of the oldest, safest and most effective modern medicines, they have been used for decades on thousands of asthmatics with little known ill effects. If your doctor has prescribed a brown inhaler, the steroid, then yes he will have been happy to dish it out because of its longstanding history of being safe and effective against asthma. The reason your gp may think its asthma is because virus and bacterial infections that cause coughs are productive and do not last years.

Your dh may have been an asthmatic child that simply grew out of it, my sister was severely asthmatic until the age of 6 but grew out of it, lucky for them. But giving your dc a steroid inhaler while they are suffering with asthmatic symptoms can prevent long term damage to the small airways caused by untreated inflammation, and help their lungs grow into normal functioning ones.

If you decide to go ahead with the steroid inhaler, you need to be consistent and give it at the correct dose at the allocated times, every day. It'll take a while to have an effect, weeks even to build up in the system and reduce inflammation. You will not know overnight whether its worked.

Also, there are lots of natural, not chopped onion woo, remedies that help asthma. But I think you should go back to your gp and give conventional medicine a chance first. Your gp can also refer you to an asthma nurse who will advise you on triggers and suchlike.

Report
VanellopeVonSchweetz · 12/02/2013 19:59

Thanks, couldn't get appointment today so will see GP in the morning.

OP posts:
Report
amillionyears · 13/02/2013 21:31

Have you taken them both to see the GP now?

Report
VanellopeVonSchweetz · 17/02/2013 21:51

I'm now five days on after giving on the advice of GP Salbutamol via inhaler and Allerief containing Chlorphenamine via oral liquid medicine to both children. They are both still coughing all be it slightly less than before, during day and at night. I changed both of their pillows to anti allergy featherless type just in case. Still baffled as to why this is still going on. Any ideas why ?

OP posts:
Report
amillionyears · 17/02/2013 21:56

Glad you came back.
I had been hoping that the children were taken to the GP.

How long and how often did the GP say they were to have the Salbutamol and medicine for?

Also, have you seen the thread today all about asthma.
I have been hoping you may have seen it.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

VanellopeVonSchweetz · 17/02/2013 22:00

Thanks for your reply. GP suggested 3 times a day for both inhaler and medicine and just to continue until seeing a nurse in a week or so.

OP posts:
Report
chocolatespiders · 17/02/2013 22:01

Is the salbutamol one the one that the effects only last an hour. You may need a brown inhaler which the effects last longer from,

Report
VanellopeVonSchweetz · 17/02/2013 22:01

Oh and I meant to say how do i get to that link you suggested ?

OP posts:
Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.