February 22, 2016 - Pediatric Laboured Breathing Flashcards

1
Q

Signs of Respiratory Failure in a Child

A

Waxen or cyanotic appearance

Gasping, axious appearance

Fatigued appearance

Marked retractions

Nasal flaring

Grunting

Head bob

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2
Q

Wheeze in a Child

A

Expiratory noise

High-pitched

Caused by small airways (bronchi and bronchioles)

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3
Q

Stridor in a Child

A

More commonly an inspiratory noise, but can be expiratory.

High or low pitched.

Usually larynx and trachea involvement

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4
Q

DDx of Wheeze

A

Bronchiolitis

Asthma

Aspiration

Endobronchitis (cystic fibrosis)

Pulmonary edema

Foreign body aspiration

Granuloma

Bronchomalacia

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5
Q

Laryngomalacia

A

Literally “soft larynx”

The most common cause of stridor in infancy in which the soft, immature cartilage of the upper larynx collapses inward during inhalation, causing airway obstruction.

Typically presents at 2-3 weeks of age, is inspiratory stridor, worse while supine, better while prone, rarely interferes with sleeping, feeding or growth.

Peaks at 3 months and spontaneously resolves by 12-18 months.

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6
Q

Red Flags for Stridor

A

Present at birth

Biphasic

Abnormal voice

Poor feeding / growth

If these are present, the patient needs a laryngoscopy/bronchoscopy

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7
Q

DDx for Acute Onset of Stridor

A

Croup

Bacterial tracheitis

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8
Q

Croup

A

A respiratory infection usually caused by a virus that leads to swelling inside the wind pipe, which interferes with normal breathing and produces the classic symptoms of “barking” cough, stridor, and a hoarse voice.

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9
Q

Bacterial Tracheitis

A

A bacterial infection of the trachea and the airway obstruction that results.

Staphylococcus aureus is common and often follows a recent viral URTI. This is the most serious in young children because of the smaller size of the trachea that becomes easily blocked with swelling.

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