Most coughs resolve within three to four weeks and do not require specialist input. Your GP can effectively manage recent viral infections, simple chest infections, first-line asthma treatment, and basic reflux management. However, there is a point at which specialist expertise and diagnostic tools make a meaningful difference to outcomes.
1. Your Cough Has Lasted More Than 8 Weeks
A cough persisting beyond eight weeks is considered chronic and indicates an underlying condition rather than a lingering post-viral cough. Common causes I investigate include asthma even without classic wheeze, acid reflux affecting the airways, post-nasal drip, eosinophilic bronchitis, and less commonly bronchiectasis or interstitial lung disease. An eight-week cough always warrants specialist assessment.
2. You Are Coughing Up Blood
Haemoptysis — coughing up blood — always requires specialist investigation, even if the amount is small or just streaks in the sputum. I need to rule out chest infections, bronchiectasis, lung cancer, tuberculosis, and blood vessel abnormalities. Do not panic, but do not ignore it. The majority of causes are treatable, but prompt assessment is essential.
3. Red Flag Symptoms Accompanying the Cough
Book an urgent specialist appointment if your cough comes with unexplained weight loss, drenching night sweats, persistent breathlessness, chest pain, a hoarse voice that will not clear, or swollen lymph nodes in the neck. These red flag symptoms require prompt assessment to exclude serious underlying pathology.
4. Multiple Treatments Have Not Worked
If your GP has tried two or more courses of antibiotics, asthma inhalers for six to eight weeks, reflux medications, and cough suppressants without improvement, it is time for specialist input. I have access to diagnostic tools not available in primary care — detailed lung function testing, CT scanning, bronchoscopy, and specialist blood tests — that can identify causes a GP cannot easily reach.
5. You Are a Current or Former Smoker
If you smoke or previously smoked, a new persistent cough needs specialist assessment sooner rather than later. I check for COPD even in mild early stages, early lung cancer, and chronic bronchitis. Early detection in smokers changes outcomes dramatically — do not wait for symptoms to become severe before seeking assessment.
6. The Cough Is Significantly Affecting Your Life
If coughing is waking you multiple times nightly, causing vomiting, leading to rib pain, making you incontinent, or affecting your work and relationships, you deserve specialist help to find a solution. Chronic cough at this level of impact is not something you simply have to live with — effective treatments exist once the cause is properly identified.
7. You Work in a High-Risk Environment
If your cough started or worsened after working with asbestos, dust, or chemicals, farming or agricultural environments, or healthcare settings with possible TB exposure, occupational lung disease needs specialist diagnosis. This is important both for your health and for medico-legal reasons relating to workplace exposure.
What to Expect at Your Specialist Appointment
When you come to see me I will take a detailed history covering when the cough started, what makes it worse, associated symptoms, work history, and smoking history. I will examine your chest thoroughly, check your oxygen levels, and arrange the most appropriate investigations. You will leave with a clear explanation of the likely cause and a management plan — not just further waiting.
Signs You May Have COPD
- Cough lasting more than 8 weeks — chronic and needs specialist investigation
- Any blood in sputum — always requires urgent specialist assessment
- Weight loss, night sweats, or chest pain alongside a cough — red flags
- Multiple GP treatments tried with no improvement
- Current or former smoker with a new persistent cough
Respiratory Services
If you are experiencing ongoing breathing problems, specialist respiratory assessment may help clarify the diagnosis and guide treatment.
- Chronic Cough Investigation
- Asthma Diagnosis and Assessment
- Spirometry and Detailed Lung Function Testing
- CT Chest Scanning and Imaging Review
- Bronchoscopy When Indicated
Frequently Asked Questions
When should a cough be referred to a specialist?
A cough should be referred to a respiratory specialist when it has lasted more than eight weeks without an identified cause, when red flag symptoms are present, when multiple GP treatments have failed, or when the cough is significantly impacting quality of life.
Can a respiratory physician diagnose asthma from a cough?
Yes. Cough-variant asthma is a well-recognised condition where chronic cough is the main or only symptom. Spirometry and specialised breathing tests can confirm an asthma diagnosis even in the absence of classic wheezing.
What tests does a respiratory physician do for a chronic cough?
Depending on the clinical picture, investigations may include spirometry, chest X-ray, CT scan, allergy testing, reflux assessment, specialist blood tests, and in some cases bronchoscopy to directly examine the airways.
Is it worth seeing a private respiratory physician for a cough?
Private consultation allows rapid access to a specialist — typically within days — along with comprehensive investigation in a single appointment. For patients who have been waiting weeks for NHS referrals or whose cough is significantly affecting their life, private assessment provides answers and treatment far more quickly.
Can occupational exposure cause a chronic cough?
Yes. Exposure to asbestos, silica dust, agricultural dusts, chemical fumes, and certain workplace environments can cause occupational lung disease presenting as a chronic cough. Specialist diagnosis is important for both treatment and any necessary medico-legal documentation.
Get Answers for Your Persistent Cough in Liverpool
If your cough has not responded to GP treatment or you have any of the red flag symptoms described above, do not keep waiting. Private specialist assessment provides rapid answers and effective treatment. Appointments available at our Liverpool and Manchester clinics.
Book a Consultation — Call 0161 832 2111
About Dr Suman Paul
Dr Suman Paul is a Consultant Respiratory Physician with extensive experience diagnosing and managing complex lung diseases including COPD, asthma, pulmonary fibrosis and lung cancer.
Private respiratory consultations are available at Pall Mall Medical Liverpool, 5 St Pauls Square, Liverpool, L3 9SJ.
