The cough associated with
heart failure is typically a dry cough, which means
that it does not produce phlegm. The cough is dry because usually there is no
increased fluid or phlegm in the bronchial tubes. Rather, the swelling inside
the walls of the bronchial tubes and lung tissue itself causes irritation,
which stimulates a cough.
ACE inhibitor medicines, which may be used to treat heart failure,
can cause a similar dry cough, which may lead to some confusion as to whether
the cough is caused by heart failure or the medicines.
In severe heart failure, blood backing up in the lungs may be severe
enough to cause fluid to leak out into the air space. This can cause the person
to cough up fluid that is either clear or pink and frothy.
People with heart failure may also wheeze in addition to coughing.
This wheezing is similar to the wheezing that people with asthma or lung cancer
experience. The wheezing associated with heart failure is sometimes called
"cardiac asthma" and develops because the airways in the lungs narrow because
of the buildup of fluid in the lungs.