SymptomDoctor-Reviewed

Cough: Common Causes, Red Flags, and Suggested Tests

Understand dry vs productive cough, warning signs, likely causes, and what to do next.

Last reviewed: 07 February 2026

Key Takeaways

What you need to know at a glance

Short-term cough is usually self-limited.
Breathlessness and blood in sputum are danger signs.
Persistent cough needs targeted clinical workup.

When to Seek Urgent Care

Contact your doctor or visit the nearest ER immediately

  • Immediate care is needed for breathlessness, chest pain, blood in sputum, bluish lips, confusion, or oxygen drop.
Call Emergency (112)

Available 24/7 across India

Full Article

Quick Answer#

Cough is often due to viral infection, allergy, reflux, or airway irritation. Most improve with supportive care, but persistent cough needs evaluation.

Emergency Signs#

Immediate care is needed for breathlessness, chest pain, blood in sputum, bluish lips, confusion, or oxygen drop.

Common Causes#

Common cold, allergic rhinitis, asthma, sinus drip, reflux, smoking exposure, and chest infections are frequent causes.

Suggested Tests#

Depending on duration and exam findings, clinicians may suggest CBC, chest X-ray, spirometry, or infection-specific tests.

What To Do Now#

Hydrate, avoid smoke exposure, use steam inhalation where appropriate, and follow prescribed medicines.

When To See A Doctor#

Review is important if cough lasts more than 2 to 3 weeks, disturbs sleep daily, or is associated with fever, breathlessness, or weight loss.

Medicines for Cough: Common Causes, Red Flags, and Suggested Tests

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Frequently Asked Questions

2 questions answered by our medical team

1
When is cough considered chronic?

A cough persisting beyond several weeks should be medically evaluated for chronic causes.

2
Do antibiotics help all cough?

No. Antibiotics are useful only for selected bacterial causes and should be clinician-prescribed.

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Medically Reviewed Content

Verified by licensed healthcare professionals

P

Written By

PingMeDoc Editorial Team

Clinical Content Desk

D

Medical Reviewer

Dr Balaji Krishnan

MBBS, MBA

Medical Reviewer

Last Reviewed

07 February 2026

Following our clinical review workflow

All content is reviewed by licensed healthcare professionals before publication and updated regularly for accuracy.

References & Sources

1 cited source

  1. 1

    CDC: Cough and respiratory illness guidance

    CDC2025View source

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What to Do Next

Recommended actions based on this article

1

Book a Relevant Test

Start with a lab test that helps clinical evaluation.

2

Consult a Doctor

Discuss symptoms and report findings with a clinician.