Week 2 - Aquantic/Cardiorespiratory Flashcards
When do children develop adult respiratory characteristics?
3 months - 12 years
What are risks associated with children respiratory
Infants and children can develop respiratory distress very quickly with respiratory infection
What are respiratory anatomic differences of children
- Preferential nose breathers
- larynx position
- Trachea short and smaller
- Large tongue, tonsils & adenoids
- Airway diameters smaller
- bronchial wall mostly cartilage, connective tissue, mucous glands
- cilia poorly developed at birth
- alveoli smaller
- alveoli develop from 150 to 400 million by 8 years old
- No collateral ventilation at birth
- Pores of john develop 1-2 years
- channels of Martin develop 2-3
- canals of Lambert appear between 6-8 years
- Horizontal ribs, rounded chest wall
- bones of rib are soft so chest more compliant
- Respiratory muscles poorly developed
- Diaphragm inserted more horizontal and more prone to fatigue
- lungs less compliant
- Larger closing volume (CC>FRC)
- Larger tidal volume (50% vs. 10%) with smaller inspiratory and expiratory reserve
What are the differences in children’s diaphragm compared to adults?
Inserted horizontal and prone to fatigue
What are lung differences in children/infant
- lungs less compliant
- Larger closing volume (CC>FRC)
- Larger tidal volume (50% vs. 10%) with smaller inspiratory and expiratory reserve
Physiological differences of infants and children
- reversed distribution of ventilation (preferential ventilate non-dependent regions with perfusion remain distributed in the dependent lung)
List the normal changes with development
- Development of lungs parallels the motor development of baby
- Reaching out develops upper limb and chest wall muscles
- Chest wall becomes more rectangular
- Develop antigravity muscles in sitting
- Pulls ribs down from horizontal
- Increase tidal volumes
What happens if don’t develop normal respiratory changes?
Diaphragm remains their main respiratory muscle and should encourage upper limb movement, stretching and reaching
Grey area of respiratory development?
9-12
What age should there be fully adult respiratory development?
12 years
What questions would you ask the carer during the respiratory assessment?
- Stability over the last few hours
- Tolerance of handling
- Feeds (when, tolerance)
What are differences in auscultation of children/infants? (5)
CDSWR
- more complicated
- no deep breath on command
- small chest size allows easier transmission of sound
- Wheeze
- Rapid breaths
What are the signs of respiratory distress?
Tachypnoea, Tachycardia (>200), bradycardia (<80)
What are the normal RR of different stages of development? (4)
- Newborn - 30-50
- <2 years- 20-40
- 2-6 - 20-40
- > 6 years - 15-30
What are the normal HR of different stages of development? (4)
Newborn - 140 (100-200)
<2 years - 130 (100-190)
2-6 - 80 (60-140)
> 6 years - 75 (60-90)