case study: Resp Flashcards
A 9 month old girl presents with 48h of increasing wheeze and respiratory effort and a 4d history of mild runny nose and cough.
Examination shows bilateral wheeze and crackles. She has sub-costal recession, a pink throat and red ears. Resp rate 60, Sats 93% and temp 37.9o
- diagnosis?
- Investigations?
- Management?
- Bronchiolitis
- Nasopharyngeal aspirate
- No proven role for any medications
Oxygen not yet indicated (cut-off <90-92%)
Symptoms will peak on day 4-5
Feeding probably best marker of severity/recovery
Cough will persist for 1-2 weeks
What is the most common LRTI of infants?
Bronchiolitis (RSV)
Bronchiolitis sx?
Nasal stuffiness
tachypnoea
poor feeding
An 18m boy presents with a 4 hour history of barking cough and noisy breathing having been well the day before
Examination shows a runny nose, loud stridor, tracheal tug sub-costal recession, well perfused peripheries and temp of 37.8o
What are the diff dx?
management?
- Likely viral laryngotracheitis (croup)
- Consider foreign body
- Bacterial tracheitis, epiglottitis, diphtheria (all rare)
Don’t examine the throat!!
Keep calm avoid distress and anxiety (no needles)
Oral steroid (dexamethasone or ?prednisalone)
Nebulised adrenaline if severe
Croup (LTB)
bacteria/ virus responsible?
sx?
mx?
common or rare?
Para’flu I
Well, Coryza++, stridor, hoarse voice, “barking” cough
Oral steroids
common
Epiglottitis?
bacteria/ virus responsible?
sx?
mx?
common or rare?
H. influenzae Type B
Toxic
Stridor, drooling
Intubation and antibiotics
Rare
Tracheitis
bacteria/ virus responsible?
sx?
mx?
common or rare?
Staph Aureus
Pale
Stridor, barking cough, fever, recurs despite steroids
Steroids (?IV) Fluclox +/- Cefotax (IV/Oral)
Uncommon
A 14 month old girl presents with 12h of increasing wheeze and respiratory effort and a 3d history of runny nose and cough.
Examination shows bilateral wheeze, no creps and sub-costal recession, a pink throat and red ears. Resp rate of 60 and temperature 37.5o
- Diagnosis and differential?
- Other history features to help you decide?
- Management?
- Viral induced wheeze (secondary to URTI)
?Bronchiolitis
2.
Rapidly worse (“they were okay yesterday”)
Previous wheeze or atopy (allergies/ eczema)
FMH atopy (allergies/ eczema/ hayfever/ asthma)
3.
Salbutamol MDI via spacer (up to 10 puffs)
Consider oral prednisalone + nebuliser if severe
How does a viral wheeze usually present
May follow or overlap with URTI/ LRTI
Usually viral trigger, quicker deterioration More common in atopic families Typically pre school Majority of wheeze in under 5s Simplistically Under 18 months, most likely infection Over 5 years, most likely asthma Earlier the presentation the more likely to resolve
A 3y old girl presents with a 4 day history of increasing lethargy, cough, fever and tummy pain. She has vomited x4 in the last 2 days.
Examination showed temp 39.8o, resp rate 40, nasal flaring, intercostal recession, no focal chest findings, RUQ discomfort, soft abdomen.
- Diagnosis and differential?
- Investigation
- management?
1, LRTI/ Right lower lobe pneumonia
?UTI
?Appendicitis
- Check saturations (Consider admission ?Threshold)
Consider CXR to confirm clinical signs/ bloods (but won’t confirm aetiology)
Check urine dipstix/ culture - Oral amoxicillin/ IV if vomiting
Pneumonia presentation?
Fever (>38.5oC), SOB, cough, grunting
Wheeze makes bacterial cause less likely
Reduced or bronchial breath sounds or minimal
pneumonia management?
Amoxicillin first line
Macrolide 2nd line
Broad spectrum IV for neonates/ septic patients
pneumonia infective agents?
Viruses in <35% (higher in younger)
Bacteria Pneumococcus, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia