Acute Bronchitis
|
Download this Factsheet
as a PDF
|
Introduction
Acute bronchitis is an acute respiratory infection characterised
by cough productive of sputum which may be accompanied by wheezing.
Viral causes include influenza, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
and parainfluenza; bacterial causes include Streptococcus pneumoniae,
Haemophilus influenzae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Bordetella pertussis.
The majority of patients with acute bronchitis who seek medical
attention are treated exclusively in primary care. New episodes
presenting in primary care are estimated from the Weekly Returns
Service (WRS) of the Royal College of General Practitioners (see
footnote).
|




Summary
- New episode rates of acute bronchitis and asthma rose
in the 1980s but have fallen since the early 1990s.
- Acute bronchitis is commonest in pre-school children
and elderly persons.
- Acute bronchitis peaks just before the New Year in pre-school
children, but just after in the elderly.
- There is a marked temporal association between respiratory
infections, including acute bronchitis and deaths from
all causes.
|
|
Trends from year to year
Trends in rates of acute bronchitis and asthma by age group for
years 1979-1998 are presented in Figures 1 and 2. Rates of acute
bronchitis increased in all age groups, reaching a peak in the
early 1990s, declining thereafter. Acute bronchitis is commonest
in children aged 0-4 years; followed by the elderly (aged 65 years
and over) and is least common in those aged between 5 and 44 years.
Between 1979 and 1993 the greatest increase occurred in the elderly.
|
Comparison with asthma
Trends in the incidence of asthma attacks are similar to those
for acute bronchitis, increasing until the early 1990s and declining
since, but the rise in new episode incidence rates in the 1980s
was greater for asthma than for acute bronchitis.
The frequency of new episodes of acute bronchitis is much higher
than that for asthma attacks for most age groups, except for children
aged 5-14 years.
Therefore, in most age groups, a relatively small diagnostic
shift away from acute bronchitis to asthma could considerably
affect rates for the latter condition. However, the increased
frequency of both conditions in the 1980s and early 1990s suggests
that the increase in asthma was not due to a diagnostic shift
away from acute bronchitis.
|
Seasonal variations
Acute bronchitis is commonest around the turn of the year. In
young children aged 0-4 years, acute bronchitis peaks just before
the end of the year, but in persons aged 65 years and over the
peak is 2 weeks later, in the first week of the year (Figure 3).
This winter peak contrasts with the early autumn peak in incidence
of acute asthma attacks (LAIA factsheet 93/4), but coincides with
the months of highest mortality rates, particularly among the
elderly (Figure 4).
A similar seasonal pattern among elderly patients is evident
for other acute upper and lower respiratory diseases included
in the Weekly Returns Service. (Aggregated respiratory disease
(ARD) represents the sum of new episodes of all respiratory conditions
surveyed: acute bronchitis, common cold, influenza, influenza-like
illness, acute tonsillitis, acute sinusitis, laryngitis/tracheitis,
pneumonia/pneumonitis and pleurisy). It is striking how closely
the seasonal variations in acute bronchitis and ARD among the
elderly match those of deaths, regardless of cause. It is likely
that acute respiratory infections are a common immediate cause
of death for persons with non-respiratory disease.
Footnote
Since 1967, the Weekly Returns Service has collected information
on episodes of disease presenting to general practitioners. Currently
72 practices with a registered population of 600,000 are surveyed.
Doctors record their working diagnoses, specifying whether the patient
is consulting about a new or an ongoing episode of disease. Results
are collated on a weekly basis by the Royal College of General Practitioners
Research Unit, Birmingham and published as an Annual Report. Weekly
data are accessible on http://www.rcgp.bru.demon.co.uk
|
|
|
|
|