[成人急性咳嗽]。

ZFA. Zeitschrift fur Allgemeinmedizin Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2022-05-01 DOI:10.53180/zfa.2022.0169-0177
Karen Krüger, Christoph Heintze, Sabine Gehrke-Beck, Felix Holzinger
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:急性咳嗽(<8周)是家庭实践咨询中常见的主诉。最常见的病因是呼吸道感染。德国全科医生和家庭医生学院(DEGAM)的指南“急性和慢性咳嗽”于2021年更新,其中包含了在初级保健中管理急性咳嗽的循证方法的建议。方法:根据对国际指南和系统综述文献的系统检索结果,对指南进行了更新。所有建议都是由一个跨学科指导委员会制定的,并以正式协商一致方式达成一致。结果:病史、排除危险信号和体检是诊断评估的基础。如果可能是急性、无并发症的支气管炎,则不应进行实验室检查、痰诊断或胸部x光检查,也不应使用抗生素。可以使用基于证据的策略来避免抗生素治疗(延迟处方、共同决策、护理点测试)。镇咳或祛痰药对急性咳嗽的疗效没有充分的证据。植物治疗剂的证据状态是异质的;临床重要性微乎其微。新冠肺炎目前应考虑急性呼吸道症状的病例。如果出现特定症状或危险信号,应考虑急性咳嗽的进一步诊断,如社区获得性肺炎、流感和慢性呼吸道疾病(支气管哮喘、COPD)的恶化。结论:这些基于证据的建议旨在减少抗生素治疗感冒和急性支气管炎的使用,但这些建议并不适用。应进一步进行咳嗽症状治疗的临床试验,以扩大证据基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Acute Cough in Adult Patients].

Background: Acute cough (< 8 weeks) is a frequent complaint in family practice consultations. The most common cause are respiratory infections. The Guideline "Acute and chronic cough" of the German College of General Practitioners and Family Physicians (DEGAM) was updated in 2021 and contains recommendations for an evidence-based approach for the management of acute cough in primary care.

Methods: The guideline has been updated in accordance with the findings of a systematic search of the literature for international guidelines and systematic reviews. All recommendations were developed by an interdisciplinary guideline committee and agreed by formal consensus.

Results: History-taking, exclusion of red flags and a physical examination are the basis of diagnostic evaluation. If an acute, uncomplicated bronchitis is likely, no laboratory tests, sputum diagnostics, or chest x-rays should be performed, and antibiotics should not be administered. Evidence based strategies to avoid antibiotic therapy (delayed prescribing, shared decision making, point-of-care-tests) can be used. There is inadequate evidence for the efficacy of antitussive or expectorant drugs against acute cough. The state of the evidence for phytotherapeutic agents is heterogeneous; clinical importance is minimal. COVID-19 should currently be considered in cases of acute respiratory symptoms. If specific symptoms or red flags occur, further diagnoses in the context of acute cough such as community-acquired pneumonia, influenza disease and exacerbations of chronic respiratory diseases (bronchial asthma, COPD) should be taken into consideration.

Conclusions: These evidence-based recommendations are intended to reduce the use of antibiotics to treat colds and acute bronchitis, for which they are not indicated. Further clinical trials of symptomatic treatments for cough should be performed in order to extend the evidence base.

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