Also known as: Non-Productive Cough
A dry cough produces no mucus or phlegm. It can be irritating and persistent, often caused by viral infections, allergies, asthma, or medication side effects.
Dry cough is one of the most common symptoms, frequently persisting after upper respiratory infections for 2-3 weeks as airways heal. Post-viral cough is the single most common cause of short-term dry cough.
Cough-variant asthma presents exclusively as dry cough, often worse at night, without typical wheezing. ACE inhibitor medications cause persistent dry cough in 5-15% of users.
Environmental irritants including dry air, pollution, and dust can trigger or perpetuate dry coughing.
There are several possible reasons you may be experiencing Dry Cough. Here are the most common ones.
Airways remain hypersensitive for weeks after a cold, causing persistent dry cough that gradually resolves.
Asthma where the only symptom is chronic dry cough, particularly at night or with exercise.
Blood pressure medications that cause bradykinin accumulation, leading to a characteristic dry tickly cough.
Dry air, dust, smoke, and pollution irritate airways causing reactive dry cough.
These approaches may help manage dry cough at home. Always consult a healthcare provider if symptoms persist or worsen.
Honey coats the throat and has mild cough-suppressant properties. Warm tea soothes irritation.
Adding moisture to indoor air reduces airway irritation from dry environments.
Menthol or honey lozenges stimulate saliva production and soothe throat irritation.
Clinical history, spirometry with bronchial challenge testing for asthma, chest X-ray if persistent, and medication review.
See a doctor if dry cough persists over 3 weeks, is accompanied by wheezing or shortness of breath, or occurs with unexplained weight loss.
Steps you can take to reduce the likelihood of experiencing dry cough.
Treat allergies proactively
Use a humidifier in dry environments
Avoid smoking and irritant exposure
Review medications that may cause cough
Post-viral cough commonly persists 2-3 weeks after other cold symptoms resolve, sometimes up to 8 weeks.
Yes. Reflux can irritate the larynx causing dry cough, sometimes without typical heartburn.
If lasting over 3 weeks, worsening, accompanied by breathing difficulty, or producing blood.
This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.