A child with protracted bacterial bronchitis often looks well between coughing spells, but the cough is wet, daily and stubborn. The goal is not to suppress the cough. The goal is to recognise the pattern, treat appropriately when PBB fits, and make sure recurrent or non-resolving wet cough is not hiding a bigger airway problem.

Red flags first
A wet cough is not always safe to watch.
  • Chest indrawing, grunting, blue lips, drowsiness, exhaustion or low oxygen needs urgent in-person care.
  • Choking history, sudden cough, one-sided wheeze or sudden noisy breathing should not be labelled PBB without urgent assessment.
  • Fast breathing with fever, severe chest pain, dehydration, poor feeding or a child who looks very unwell should not wait online.
  • Coughing blood, poor growth, clubbing, recurrent pneumonia or wet cough from early infancy needs structured specialist review.
  • Do not use video consultation as the first step for acute respiratory distress or rapid worsening.
Chronic wet cough board
PBB care works best when parents connect wet cough duration, red flags, antibiotic response, recurrence and cause-finding.
सह
The cough is wet because mucus is present.

PBB is usually about ongoing airway infection and mucus, not a habit cough, not ordinary post-viral throat tickle and not asthma alone.

01
Emergency signsLow oxygen, chest indrawing, blue lips or drowsiness needs urgent care.
02
Wet daily coughParents often describe rattly, phlegmy cough that does not fully clear.
03
Four-week clueChronic cough in children is commonly defined as cough lasting more than four weeks.
04
Response mattersCough resolution after appropriate antibiotics supports the PBB diagnosis.
05
Recurrence mattersRepeated episodes or incomplete response need bronchiectasis and cause review.
06
Cause findingAspiration, airway anomaly, PCD, CF and immune problems may need review.

A safer PBB conversation separates common prolonged wet cough from red-flag chronic lung disease.

Check 01
Is the cough truly wet?

A wet, rattly or phlegmy cough most days is different from a dry tickle, habit cough or throat-clearing pattern.

Check 02
Has it lasted more than four weeks?

PBB is usually considered in chronic wet cough, not every cold-related cough in the first few days.

Check 03
Are there specific warning clues?

Poor growth, clubbing, recurrent pneumonia, choking, early infancy onset, blood, focal chest signs or immune concerns change the pathway.

Check 04
Did it fully resolve?

Partial improvement is not the same as resolution. Families should track whether the wet cough actually disappeared.

Check 05
Has it returned?

Recurrent PBB, repeated antibiotic courses or non-response should prompt deeper review rather than endless repeat prescriptions.

Parent tip: Record cough duration, wet/dry quality, fever, sleep impact, sputum if any, choking history, previous antibiotics, response timeline, X-rays, growth chart, school absence and any wheeze or asthma medicines.

Original parent-guide visual by Together We Breathe · © 2026. Designed to explain PBB conversations for families. It does not replace prescribing, examination, cultures, imaging, emergency care or specialist follow-up.

What PBB is — and what it is not.

Protracted bacterial bronchitis means there is a prolonged bacterial infection and inflammation inside the larger airways, causing a chronic wet cough. It is usually a clinical diagnosis made after careful review of the cough pattern and exclusion of other warning clues.

Clues parents may notice.

Wet cough most days

The cough sounds phlegmy, rattly or chesty, and it persists beyond the usual cold timeline.

More than four weeks

PBB is usually considered when wet cough becomes chronic, commonly beyond four weeks in children.

Otherwise active child

Many children with PBB can look well, play and have no fever, which is why the cough pattern matters.

Poor response to cough syrup

Suppressants, mucolytics or repeated cold medicines do not address airway infection when PBB is the issue.

Antibiotic response

Resolution after an appropriate clinician-prescribed antibiotic course supports the diagnosis; incomplete response needs review.

Recurrent episodes

Multiple episodes in a year or persistent wet cough after treatment should prompt deeper cause-finding.

How clinicians think through diagnosis.

Key message
PBB is treatable, but repeated PBB is a warning signal.

A single clinician-directed treatment course may resolve the cough. But recurrent episodes, incomplete response, repeated pneumonia, poor growth, choking history or abnormal examination should shift the conversation toward bronchiectasis risk and underlying causes.

Why antibiotics should not be used blindly.

When recurrent PBB needs deeper review.

What not to do blindly.

Medical trust note
How this page was prepared.

This parent guide is written in simple language and reviewed for clinical safety by Dr. Antar Patel. It uses pediatric chronic wet cough, PBB, CHEST, ERS, ATS patient education and bronchiectasis-risk source families. It avoids copied copyrighted figures, does not provide antibiotic dosing, and is for education only.

Frequently asked questions.

01What is protracted bacterial bronchitis?
PBB is a common cause of chronic wet cough in children. It is usually considered when wet cough lasts more than four weeks, there are no clear signs of another cause, and the cough resolves with appropriate clinician-prescribed antibiotics.
02Is PBB the same as asthma?
No. PBB usually causes wet, phlegmy cough. Asthma more often has wheeze, chest tightness, exercise symptoms, trigger patterns and reliever response. Some children can have both.
03Does every wet cough need antibiotics?
No. Short wet coughs during viral infections are common. Antibiotics should be clinician-directed when the pattern fits and safety signs have been reviewed.
04Why does recurrent PBB matter?
Recurrent PBB can be associated with bronchiectasis risk or an underlying reason mucus is not clearing well. Repeated episodes need follow-up rather than endless repeat prescriptions.
05What if the cough only partly improves?
Partial improvement is not the same as resolution. Persistent wet cough after treatment should prompt review of the diagnosis, treatment fit, adherence and possible underlying causes.
06When is wet cough urgent?
Urgent care is needed for chest indrawing, blue lips, drowsiness, low oxygen, severe breathlessness, choking history, coughing blood, dehydration, severe chest pain or a very unwell child.

Related guides.

Wet cough
Chronic wet cough what parents should track

Daily wet cough beyond four weeks should be assessed, not suppressed blindly.

Timeline
Cough more than 4 weeks what to check

Duration, wet quality, red flags and reports guide the next step.

Bronchiectasis
Bronchiectasis in children when airways need protection

Recurrent PBB can prompt bronchiectasis and cause-finding review.

PCD
Primary ciliary dyskinesia mucus clearance clues

Early wet cough, chronic nasal symptoms and recurrent infections may need review.

Aspiration
Aspiration and swallowing feeding-lung connection

Cough with feeds or choking history changes the chronic cough pathway.

Safety
Emergency breathing signs when to go now

Chest indrawing, blue lips, drowsiness and low oxygen should not wait online.

→ See also
Wet cough in a child

When wet cough is protracted bacterial bronchitis.