Diagnosis and management of asthma in preschoolers: A Canadian Thoracic Society and Canadian Pediatric Society position paper Flashcards
What is associated with recurrent preschool wheezing?
Substantial morbidity
10% lowered FEV1
May impact long-term health
What terms should not refer to asthma in preschoolers?
Bronchospasms
Reactive airway disease
Wheezy bronchitis
Happy wheezer
What are some factors that heighten suspicion of asthma but are not necessary for diagnosis?
- Personal atopy (e.g. eczema, food allergy, etc.)
2. Family history of asthma
When should the diagnosis of asthma should be considered in children 1-5yo?
Children with recurrent (>2) asthma-like symptoms or exacerbations (episodes with asthma-like signs), even when only triggered by viral respiratory infections
What are symptoms of airflow obstruction?
- Wheezing
- Decreased breath sounds
- Tachypnea
- Prolonged expiration
- Signs of accessory muscle use
- Hypoxemia
- Altered LOC
- Cough (not specific)
- Chronic cough occurs during sleep, allergen exposures, exertion, laughing or crying
What are the operational diagnostic criteria for asthma in children one to five years of age?
- Documentation of airflow obstruction
- Preferred: documented wheezing and other signs of airflow obstruction by MD or trained HCP
- Alternative: convincing parental report of wheezing or other symptoms of airflow obstruction - Documentation of reversibility of airflow obstruction
- Preferred: documented improvement in signs of airflow obstruction to SABA +/- oral corticosteroids by physician or trained HCP
- Alternative: convincing parental report of symptomatic response to a 3m trial of a medium dose of ICS (w/ as-needed SABA)
- Alternative: convincing parental report of a symptomatic response SABA - No clinical evidence of an alternative diagnosis
How does bronchiolitis usually present?
First episode of wheezing in a child <1y of age
What are signs/symptoms (red flags) suggesting an alternative diagnosis to asthma?
- Persistent nasal discharge –> infectious/allergic rhinosinusitis
- stridor or noisy breathing worse when crying, eating, supine or w/ respiratory infection –> upper airway narrowing:
a) infection: croup, tracheitis
b) intrinsic: laryngomalacia, tracheal stenosis
c) extrinsic: vascular ring, tumor - Acute onset of cough, wheeze or stridor during eating or playing, history of choking, recurrent pneumonia in the same location –> foreign body inhalation, aspiration of food/gastric contents
4 First episode wheeze in child <1yo –> bronchiolitis
- Sick contacts, focal signs on CXR –> pneumonia, atelectasis, TB, pertussis
- Severe, paroxysms of cough, possibly initially associated w/ a “whoop” –> pertussis
- Premature birth, needed prolonged supplemental O2 +/- mechanical ventilation –> BPD
- Symptoms since infancy, recurrent pneumonia, focal signs on CXR –> congenital pulmonary airway malformation
- Chronic wet cough, clubbing, FTT, recurrent pneumonia, onset in infancy, +/- steatorrhea –> bronchiectasis, CF
- Neonatal respiratory distress, early onset year-round daily cough & nasal congestion +/- situs inversus –> Primary ciliary dyskinesia
- Cough when supine, when feeding, vomiting after feeding, abdominal discomfort –> GERD
- Dysphagia, cough triggered by eating/drinking –> Eosinophilic esophagitis
- Feeding intolerance, wet cough, or noisy breathing after eating –> swallowing problem +/- aspiration
- Recurrent, persistent, severe or unusual infections –> immune dysfunction
- Cardiac murmur, cardiac failure, cyanosis when eating, FTT, tachypnea, hepatomegaly –> pulmonary edema due to: a) acute myocarditis/pericarditis
b) congenital heart disease
When does the peak SABA effect?
20 minutes
When does the response to oral corticosteroids start?
4 hours
How to do a therapeutic trial for documenting reversibility of airflow obstruction?
- Mild clinical findings
- inhaled ventolin >4puffs r/a in 30min - Mod or severe exacerbation:
- inhaled ventolin >4puffs 2-3 doses w/in 60min then r/a in 60min
- oral steroids r/a in 3-4h
prednisone 1-2mg/kg (max 50mg) OR dexamethasone 0.15-0.6mg/kg (max 10mg) - Mild intermittent symptoms or exacerbatons
- inhaled ventolin 2-4puff q4-6h prn then r/a in 30min - Frequent symptoms or mod or severe exacerbations
- inhaled ventolin 2puffs q4-6h prn then r/a in 30min
- daily inhaled corticosteroids then r/a in 3m
a) beclomethasone 100ug BID
b) ciclesonide 200ug daily
c) fluticasone 100-125ug BID
How to do a therapeutic trial for documenting reversibility of airflow obstruction?
- Mild clinical findings
- inhaled ventolin >4puffs r/a in 30min - Mod or severe exacerbation:
- inhaled ventolin >4puffs 2-3 doses w/in 60min then r/a in 60min
- oral steroids r/a in 3-4h
prednisone 1-2mg/kg (max 50mg) OR dexamethasone 0.15-0.6mg/kg (max 10mg) - Mild intermittent symptoms or exacerbatons
- inhaled ventolin 2-4puff q4-6h prn then r/a in 30min - Frequent symptoms or mod or severe exacerbations
- inhaled ventolin 2puffs q4-6h prn then r/a in 30min
- daily inhaled corticosteroids then r/a in 3m
a) beclomethasone 100ug BID
b) ciclesonide 200ug daily
c) fluticasone 100-125ug BID
What is the PRAM score?
- Oxygen saturation:
- >95% 0
- 92-94% 1
- <92% 2 - Suprasternal retraction
- Absent 0
- Present 2 - Scalene muscle contraction
- Absent 0
- Present 2 - Air entry
- Normal 0
- Decreased at the base 1
- Decreased at the apex and the base 2
- Minimal or absent 3 - Wheezing
- Absent 0
- Expiratory only 1
- Inspiratory +/- Expiratory 2
- Audible w/out stethoscope OR silent chest 3
PRAM SCORE:
- 0-3 Mild
- 4-7 Moderate
- 8-12 Severe
What is the preferred diagnostic method for preschool asthmatics?
In children 1-5yo:
- recurrent >2 episodes of asthma-like sx and wheezing on presentation
- direct observation of improvement w/ inhaled bronchodilator (w/ or w/out oral corticosteroids) by MD or trained HCP confirms the diagnosis
What is the alternative diagnostic method for preschool asthmatics?
Children 1-5yo:
- recurrent >2 episodes of asthma-like symptoms, no wheezing on presentation, frequent symptoms, or any moderate or severe exacerbation warrant 3m therapeutic trial w/ a med. daily dose of ICS (w/ prn SABA).
Clear consistent improvement in the frequency & severity of symptoms and/or exacerbations confirms the diagnosis