Paediatric emergencies Flashcards
Name the most common micro-organisms causing sepsis
Bacteria:
- coagulase-negative Staphylococcus
- Staph. aureus
- non-pyogenic streptococci
- Strep. pneumoniae
- Neissseria meningitidis
- E. coli
Suggest examples of sepsis red flags.
- Appearance
- appears ill to healthcare professional
- looks mottled/ashen
- cyanosis of skin, lips or tongue
- non-blanching rash - Breathing
- grunting/apnoea
- SpO2 <90% in air or increased O2 requirement over baseline
- RR >60/min for <1 yo, >50/min for 1-2 yo, >40/min for 3-4 yo - Circulation
- HR <60/min
- HR >160/min for <1 yo, >150/min for 1-2 yo, >140/min for 3-4 yo - Demeanor
- no response to social cues
- does not wake
- if roused does not stay awake
- weak high-pitched or continuous cry - Exposure
- temp <36 C
- temp >38 C in <3 mths old
How would you manage a child presenting with sepsis?
- Administer high O2 - titrate aiming for SpO2 >94%
- Obtain IV/IO access and take bloods
- blood culture
- blood gas for glucose and lactate
- FBC, CRP, coagulation and U/Es - LP unless contraindicated if <1 mth old or 1-3 mth old + looks unwell or has WBC <5 or >15, and consider urine, CSF or line cultures and meningococcal PCR
- Give broad spectrum IV or IO antibiotics
- Consider fluid resuscitation: 20 ml/kg (10 ml/kg if <28 days) 0.9% NaCl over 5-10 mins, repeat if necessary
- Escalation - review by senior clinician St4+, discuss with consultant paed/PICU if lactate >4 mmol/l or no clinical improvement following second fluid bolus
- consider inotropic support (adrenaline infusion IV/IO) if normal physiological parameters not restored after 40 ml/kg fluids
Which broad spectrum antibiotics would you prescribe a child presenting with sepsis (according to age group)?
- <28 days: IV gentamicin + amoxicillin (listeria cover) + cefotaxime
- 1-3 mths: IV amoxicillin + ceftriaxone
- > 3 mths: IV ceftriaxone
Why is cefotaxime preferred in neonates compared to ceftriaxone?
Less likely to cause cholestasis/jaundice and can be given alongside Ca2+. But has to be given QDS.
Describe the most common organisms causing meningitis in different age groups.
Viral infections most common cause:
- enteroviruses (Coxsackie or Echovirus)
- Herpes viruses (HSV or VZV)
- mumps or measles
Bacterial causes:
- neonates: group B strep., Listeria monocytogenes, E. coli
- <4 yrs: H. influenzae type B, N. meningitidis, Strep. pneumoniae
- > 4 yrs: N. meningitidis, Strep. pneumoniae
Suggest possible risk factors for neonatal meningitis
- low birth weight
- premature delivery
- PROM
- traumatic delivery
- foetal hypoxia
- maternal peripartum infection
Which investigations would you perform on a child presenting with suspected meningitis?
- Bloods
- blood culture
- blood gas - for lactate, bicarb and glucose
- FBC, CRP, U/Es, bone profile, clotting
- meningococcal and pneumococcal PCR - urine MC+S, throat swab
- LP - send for
- microscopy
- culture + sensitivities
- gram stain
- HSV, VZV + enterovirus PCR
- chemistry: glucose + protein
Describe your initial management of a child presenting with meningitis
- A-E assessment and management as required, e.g. O2, IV fluids
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics
- neonate: IV gentamicin + amoxicillin + cefotaxime
- 1-3 mths: IV amoxicillin + ceftriaxone
- >3 mths: IV ceftriaxone - Steroids (IV dexamethasone) within 12 hrs since 1st Abx dose to decrease risk of cerebral oedema caused by bacterial cell lysis if: >3 mths + LP shows: frank purulent CSF, CSF protein >1 g/L or bacteria on gram stain
- Notify Public Health England
which CSF findings would increase likelihood of a bacterial meningitis? a viral meningitis?
Bacterial
- raised neutrophils (WCC>5 in >28 days or >20 in <28 days)
- raised protein (>1 g/L)
- low glucose (<50% serum Glu)
Viral
- raised lymphocytes
- normal glucose (>50% serum Glu)
- normal or high protein
how would you treat a child with viral meningitis?
- supportive treatment only for most
- IV acyclovir if herpes meningitis
Suggest possible acute and long-term complications of bacterial meningitis
Acute
- cerebral abscess
- subdural empyema
- RICP and death
Long-term
- cerebral palsy
- general learning disability (cerebral infarction)
- seizures/epilepsy (neuronal foci don’t develop properly)
- microcephaly
- visual impairment
- hearing loss