5 Crucial (and Weird) Whooping Cough Facts To Know!

Gram stain of the bacteria Bordetella pertussis.
Image via Wikipedia

As a whooping cough epidemic hits California, you may be asking yourself, “hey, weren’t we all vaccinated for that?” Even as the headlines imply a Victorian-level outbreak of hacking and coughing, perhaps you’re looking around and wondering where, exactly, this epidemic is located. And what you should know about whooping cough to protect you and yours.

Here are some fun, weird, and sometimes worrying tidbits to know about whooping cough. Pass them on to friends and co-workers – because an epidemic of knowledge is a GOOD thing to spread around:

1) Hey, you got vaccinated, and your kids did too – doesn’t that mean you’re protected? Um, no. Pertussis (the medical name for whooping cough) vaccines are actually kind of puny, and don’t last that long. Strange, but true. The original pertussis vaccine schedule was designed to protect the most vulnerable – the very young. So, to get a good baseline level of protection, your baby gets many pertussis shots, one after the other. But even after a solid start of many boosting shots, the pertussis vaccines are only effective for most people for about 5 years. That’s why your kid gets another booster around kindergarten. So before recent changes in recommended vaccinations, most of us lost our solid baby-hood protection around age 10-11. Hence the recent outbreaks. But now, because of outbreaks that are appearing across the country, the CDC has recommended that a pertussis shot be included in every tetanus booster given to every adult. Without it, even if you had a documented case of the disease, your immunity will gradually disappear…

2) I’ve never heard anyone whoop in my entire life. So how can “experts” say there’s whooping cough breaking out all over? Fact is, you don’t have to whoop to have whooping cough. If you want to hear the misery and classic sound of whooping cough, go here. The “whoop” happens when the infected person desperately tries to inhale at the end of a truly miserable bout of uncontrollable coughing. The classic “whoop” sound is believed to be more common in a person who got no vaccinations, or only one as a baby, or has lost all their immunity. Partial immunity seems to mean that people get milder versions of what is, really, a hideous infection. What’s more, the whoop occurs way late – after days to weeks of sickness, as the coughing seems to get relentlessly worse. Pertussis can be found by medical tests, so disease-trackers, even without the whoops, can know who’s getting it, and where.

3) I’m supposed to take antibiotics for a runny nose? You’ve GOT to be kidding me. Whooping cough has a strange and nasty presentation, one that seems designed to fake out everything you’ve ever been taught about how to deal with colds and flu. It begins with a typical runny nose. Then (sneaky sneaky), the runny nose seems to go away after a few days. The cough begins, but it’s not so horrible at first. Kind of like what you’d expect from a typical, seasonal upper respiratory infection. But then, right when you think you should be getting better, the spasms of coughing begin. We’re talking whole-body, snot-running-down-the-face, have-to-leave-the-meeting, holding-your-side, unable-to-catch-your-breath nastiness. These bouts will gradually worsen over time, striking at any moment, often at night, leaving a healthy person bent over, drenched in sweat and gasping. For many many people, this type of coughing hell leads inevitably to vomiting. Even in a hallway of the office, even on a street corner. It’s that involuntary. AND, it goes on and on. For weeks and weeks. THAT’S what it’s like a normal, healthy person. Imagine how this type of thing can affect someone with a touch of emphysema. Or a frail set of chest muscles. Or a frail set of chest muscles. Or a tiny, too-young-to-be-vaccinated baby (warning: graphic and heart-breaking image here). People can indeed die from it, or from the pneumonia that you can get on top of it.

4) Won’t my doctor know if I’ve got whooping cough? Somewhere around weeks two or three, if you despair and go to the doctor, a typical exam will show…nothing. Even a really good doctor is likely to send you home with an inhaler (even if you don’t have asthma) and tell you to try using it to see if the inhaler will “break” the coughing spells. But only a doctor who’s aware of pertussis outbreaks and takes the time to listen to ALL your symptoms and how long they’ve been going on will recognize that what you have is probably whooping cough. Sadly, there’s no medicine to stop pertussis once it’s truly set it. Taking the antibiotics for whooping cough AFTER you’re had it for a couple of weeks (which is when most people drag themselves into see the doctor) does nothing. If you diagnose pertussis in the first week, taking the antibiotics then may reduce how long you are infectious to other people. BUT, keep in mind, there’s hope for the people you know and love! If a person is exposed to a true case of pertussis, and starts to have the runny nose stage – THEN, if you take the appropriate antibiotics in the first 72 hours, you can nip the whole nasty disease in the bud, right there and then (although a recent review of the few studies to support this practice resulted in an “insufficient evidence” to completely verify it works).

So you heard it from me, and I’ll back you up – there is, indeed, despite everything you’ve ever been told by every doctor your entire life, one and only time in medicine when it truly is appropriate and useful to take antibiotics for a runny nose. To kill off whooping cough before it begins.

5) What do you mean, I should get a tetanus shot if I’m a smoker? That’s just crazy. Well, no. Not any longer. Anyone who’s a smoker, anyone with lung disease of any kind, anyone with breathing troubles for any reason – you’re exactly the person who wants to be sure to stay up on your tetanus boosters. Because NOW, with the recent whooping cough outbreaks, your garden-variety tetanus booster comes with a pertussis booster added on! If you’re in a risk group of any kind, you don’t want to let your whooping cough immunity lag.

So spread the word! (and not the germs…).

What do you think? Is whooping cough the sneakiest meanie to hit the streets in a long time? Do you think you had it…and never knew it? Sound off in the comments section. Remember – general medical information is NOT a replacement for medical care – if you have questions, concern or confusion about whooping cough, see your doctor. Doc Gurley is the only Harvard Medical School graduate, ever, to be awarded the coveted Shoney’s Ten Step Pin for documented excellence in waitressing, and is a practicing board-certified internist. You can get more health posts at www.docgurley.com, or jump on the Twitter bandwagon and follow Doc Gurley. Also check out Doc Gurley’s joyhabit and iwellth twitter feeds – so you can get topic-specific fun, effective, affordable tips on how to nurture your joy and grow your personal wellth.

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14 comments to 5 Crucial (and Weird) Whooping Cough Facts To Know!

  • [...] covers all kinds of interesting tidbits on her own blog, too, from the informative (5 Crucial (and Weird) Whooping Cough Facts to Know) to the controversial (Airline Fees at the Doctor’s Office), with plenty of “funny” [...]

  • Dolores

    I have been coughing uncontrolably for the past 3 months could it be whooping cough??

  • Marie

    Yup I am in the middle of whopping cough. I think I’m in week 3 now. It’s horrible…I can’t wait for it all to be over with. My whole family came down with it.

  • hmp

    Read the symptoms and definitely got hooping cough

  • sharon johnson

    How long does the cough last in an elderly patient. I have been coughing up phlegm for seven weeks.

  • g. lynn

    I had it exactly as presented above. I would actuall pass out for seconds. I had it from May to October!

  • Al

    Had it for 9 weeks this past spring. It’s around someplace, most of the time. Stay healthy with good food and lots of rest, and your body will fight it better.

  • charley

    i had a vaccine in 03 and my doc thinks i have it but i just got it 2day and ive already thrown up 4 times. when will it stop. i mean its just the 1st day!?!

  • Heather

    Have had the most awful cough for 7 weeks now. In that time, after taking antibiotics and 3 refills of ineffective codeine cough syrup, I’ve torn a muscle in my rib cage. It’s truly the most horrible, horrible disease, and imagine super violent coughing with a torn rib muscle…. EXCRUCIATING! Not to mention my reduced productivity at home and work for almost 2 months now. Get your vaccines, seriously.

  • Theresa

    I think this Thursday will make it 12 weeks that I have had whooping cough. Hands down.. worst thing I have ever experienced in my life. I fractured my rib (Oh! I also have intercostal rib damage as well! ;) )because of this stupid friggen cough that won’t seem to go away. I keep combing many different websites.. talked to several doctors and everyone keeps joking that it’s the 100 day cough and should go away. In theory I am approaching that day quite soon.. but is it possible to last even longer? I have been trying to google the answer of the longest case of whooping cough and no one seems to have an answer.

    Also, thank you for posting this! For about 2-3 weeks before my Mom said to me “Hey.. you might have whooping cough..” I went to three different doctors who didn’t know what the heck was wrong with me. I think after a while you shouldn’t have to pay a co-pay… but that’s just me. It’s just nice to have someone tell you the truth and be blunt about the situation.

    Anyway, anyone who suffers from this.. or who has suffered from this.. deserves a medal. I look forward to the day where I don’t have to fear throwing up every time I cough.

    • Donna85

      Worst cough ever just went back to doctor for 5th time today tomorrow is 2 weeks of coughing. Rib pain late last night coughing blood the tested me a gouple nights ago, the dr today is all I don’t think positive it is nothing is making cough better, scared to eat real food. They gave me hydroco-athemeniphen how ever its spelled.lots of pain. Told my husband I would rather give birth again.. At least something great comes from om that… Lol

  • Stephanie

    My journey began with a light cough that progressively got worse over the next week. I really had no other symtoms other than I was somewhat tired and grumpy. I guess I am lucky in that within a week of starting to cough, I was tested for pertussis, and the doctor started me on a z-pak “just in case.” It was a surprise to us both that the test was positive–took five days to get the results though. I don’t think my cough has been quite as extreme as many people here note, and I sure hope my case is not as severe. I will say that I had to “carry on” with the doctor to get him to act. Two doctors in one week were simply wanting to give me cough syrup, and I was coughing so bad I couldn’t stop to beg for help. But I finally told the second doc I WAS NOT LEAVING in the same shape I arrived, and I literally begged for an antibiotic and told him he HAD to do something to help me. That’s how I was reluctantly given the test and a z-pak. It might not have been early enough to help, but I do know I am better than I was–after five days on a z-pac. That is a BIT of a relief.

  • Theresa

    Hello all! So I finally beat whooping cough. It took having the flu to knock it out of my system. I hope for you all suffering with it.. do not have to take long to recover from it. So far the count is about 6 months. Just remember.. no matter how many times you go to the doctor.. you’re wasting your money. It just has to leave your body on its own. Be well!

  • Miriam

    I’ve just been diagnosed with whooping cough, and I’m 34 weeks pregnant:( I was hopping bub would come early but now I hope she can wait. The worst cough ever. I have bouts till I vomit, I have to hold my sides because it feels like my ribs are going to break, I have to sleep sitting up (it helps a little with the coughing fits) and I’ll tell you what your brain does weird things when you sit up and sleep! I thought I was doing soo well not getting sick!! This is one sucker of an illness!!!!

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