A wet or phlegmy cough is different from a dry irritating cough. In children, daily wet cough for weeks can point to mucus-producing airway disease that needs proper review.
Severe breathing difficulty, chest indrawing, blue lips, drowsiness, poor feeding, grunting, pauses in breathing, persistent fast breathing, low oxygen — these are not for online review. Go to in-person pediatric emergency care.
What parents usually notice.
- Cough sounds phlegmy or rattly
- Cough is present most days
- Child may swallow mucus rather than spit it out
- There may be recurrent chest infections or pneumonia history
Common reasons doctors think about.
- Post-infectious mucus after infection
- Protracted bacterial bronchitis
- Bronchiectasis or chronic airway disease
- Aspiration or swallowing problems
- Cystic fibrosis, primary ciliary dyskinesia or immune concerns in selected children
What a pediatric pulmonologist checks.
- Duration and daily nature of wet cough
- Past pneumonia and chest X-ray pattern
- Growth, stool/fat symptoms, sinus/ear disease and family history
- Need for imaging, sputum, bronchoscopy/BAL or specialized tests
What not to do blindly.
- Do not ignore daily wet cough lasting weeks
- Do not keep using cough suppressants to hide the symptom
- Do not assume all wet cough is simple allergy
- Do not delay review if there is poor growth, fever, blood or recurrent pneumonia
Related guides.
Bronchiectasis means long-term airway damage with mucus retention and recurrent infection/inflammation. Early recognition of chronic wet cough is impo...
Recurrent pneumonia needs pattern review: same lung area or different areas, choking/feeding symptoms, asthma, immune concerns, TB contact, aspiration...
Cystic fibrosis is a genetic condition that can affect lungs, digestion and growth. It needs specialist confirmation and long-term coordinated care....