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Teaching Respiratory Diseases in Bedside Paediatrics. Dr. Pushpa Raj Sharma Professor of Child Health Institute of Medicine. Why children are brought to Kanti Children’s Hospital?. Fever Cough or difficulty in breathing. Diarrhoea/Vomiting Not feeding well Abdominal pain Rash.
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Teaching Respiratory Diseases in Bedside Paediatrics Dr. Pushpa Raj Sharma Professor of Child Health Institute of Medicine
Why children are brought to Kanti Children’s Hospital? • Fever • Cough or difficulty in breathing. • Diarrhoea/Vomiting • Not feeding well • Abdominal pain • Rash
Triage by symptoms Convulsion/drowsy Grunting Bluish spell Persistent vomiting Inability to swallow/drooling of saliva Triage by signs Glasgow coma scale Stridor/chest in-drawing/flaring of ale nasi Cyanosis Dehydration Epiglottitis/peritonsilar abscess/ retropharyngeal abscess A child with cough or difficulty in breathing
Entry questions Threading questions Duration of symptoms Onset of symptoms Risk factors Treatments Other system involvement Does your child can lie flat while sleeping? Which side s/he prefers to lie down? Hours, days, months. Preceding runny nose Mother smoker, biomass fuel for cooking Nebuliser Mental retardation Detailed history: Present illness
Recurrent episodes Present since birth Same precipitating factor Drugs used Operations IgA deficiency Congenital anomaly Asthma Salbutamol in asthma Tonsillectomy Detailed history: Past illness
Antenatal infection Prematurity Low birth weight Intubation Hypothermia Jaundice Pneumonia Immature lung Pneumonia Laryngeal stenosis Surfactant deficiency Alfpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency Birth history
Formula feeding Vit A deficiency Protein deficiency Adequate calorie Inadequate calorie Cows milk Too much calorie Asthma Pneumonia Recurrent infection Hyper catabolic state Hypoglycaemia Haemosiderosis Diminished chest expansion Nutritional history
Delayed motor milestones. Trisomy Mental retardation Recurrent infections. IgA deficiency Aspirations Developmental history
Over crowding Similar disease Smoker Domestic smoke Carpet worker Change of place Sleeping with coal heat Recurrent infections Tuberculosis Cough Cough Tuberculosis/asthma Asthma CO poisoning Family/social history
Respiratory rate Pattern of breathing Triage signs Red eyes/runny nose Transverse creases in the nose Prominent maxilla Harrison's sulcus Atopic eczema Pneumonia Acidosis Grunting etc Viral infections Allergic rhinitis Enlarged adenoids Recurrent obstructive air way disease Asthma Inspection
Tenderness Displaced apex beat movement Cervical nodes vocal fremitus Liver Shifting trachea Trauma Pneumo/collapse Pneumonia/effusion Lymphoma Consolidation Pneumothorax/sepsis Effusion/collapse Palpation
Auscultation • Turbulent air flow through the respiratory tube causes vibration of its wall • Sound generated by this vibration is transmitted through different media to the ear drum then to cortex • Inspiration and expiration will have different quality • Changes in the wall and conducting media changes the quality of sound
Different names Dry sounds Vesicular Bronchial Vesicular with prolonged expiration Moist sound: Fine crepitations Coarse crepitations Plerual rub Types of respiratory sound Snoring stridor Wheeze Ronchi Breath sound
Asses with each respiratory cycle In respiratory tube whole inspiration and expiration In alveoli at the beginning and end of inspiration and expiration Characteristic of moist sounds
Snoring Stridor Wheeze Ronchi Prolonged expiration Vesicular Bronchial Palatal palsy Epiglottitis Asthma/foreign body Bronchiolitis Asthma Normal Consolidation/ collapse Auscultation
Tenderness Hyper resonant Dullness Displace upper border of liver dullness Trauma/infection Pneumothorax Effusion/collapse/ consolidation Hyperinflation Percussion
VSD Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis Gastrooesophageal reflux Hepatosplenomegaly Failure to thrive Recurrent pneumonia Pleural effusion Recurrent aspiration Malignancy Cystic fibrosis Other system examination