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TTN vs. TTT (Time to Transport): Assessment of Neonatal Respiratory Distress. Children’s/March of Dimes Neonatal Conference May 17, 2010. Mark Bergeron, MD, MPH Associates in Newborn Medicine, PA, St. Paul Assistant Professor, Pediatrics, University of Minnesota Medical School. Disclosures.
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TTN vs. TTT (Time to Transport): Assessment of Neonatal Respiratory Distress Children’s/March of Dimes Neonatal Conference May 17, 2010 Mark Bergeron, MD, MPH Associates in Newborn Medicine, PA, St. Paul Assistant Professor, Pediatrics, University of Minnesota Medical School
Disclosures I will not be discussing any experimental or off-label uses for any therapies during this presentation. I have no relevant financial relationships to declare.
Objectives Formulate a differential diagnosis for the infant in respiratory distress. Describe initial stabilization measures for the infant in respiratory distress. Describe situations where ongoing respiratory distress requires transfer to a NICU for further management.
Introduction • Respiratory distress is a frequent problem in the newborn period. • Most common indication for evaluation or re-evaluation of the newborn infant • Affects as many as 7% of newborns • Potentially life-threatening • Must be promptly assessed and managed by an on-site provider in the delivery room or newborn nursery
Clinical Presentation • apnea • cyanosis • grunting • stridor • nasal flaring • retractions • subcostal • intercostal • suprasternal • tachypnea • (> 60/min) • gasping • choking
Narrowing the Differential • Pulmonary • Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn (TTN) • Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS) • Meconium aspiration syndrome • Pneumonia/sepsis • Pneumothorax • Persistent pulmonary hypertension (PPHN) • Non-pulmonary • Congenital cyanotic heart disease • Congenital airway anomalies • Other (neurologic, hematologic, metabolic, endocrine, maternal, etc.)
Case #1 3.6-kg term newborn female (20 minutes old) has tachypnea and acrocyanosis. She is 40 weeks EGA delivered by scheduled repeat c-section and Apgar scores were 7 and 8 at 1 and 5 minutes, respectively. Vitals are normal with the exception of a respiratory rate of 84 and exam is notable for slight subcostal retractions but otherwise normal. Over the next several hours, her respiratory rate steadily improves to the 40s and her acrocyanosis resolves.
Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn (TTN) • Most common etiology of newborn respiratory distress. • 11/1000 live births • Represents 40% of cases of newborn respiratory distress. • Caused by delayed clearance of fetal lung fluid in both term and preterm infants
TTN Risk Factors Guglani et al. Pediatrics in Review 2008 • At birth: • Air spaces rapidly clear fluid from lung expansion with air • Promoted by: • Labor • Maternal epinephrine surge
TTN: Clinical Findings • History: • C/S > NSVD • Exam: • Tachypnea +/- • Grunting • Nasal flaring • Retractions • Transient oxygen need • Lab: • Mild respiratory acidosis or normal blood gas
TTN: Radiographic Findings • Chest X-ray: • Increased interstitial markings (“wet lung”) • Increased fluid in interlobar fissures Image: Aly H. Pediatrics in Review (2004)
TTN: Typical Course • Usually benign, self-limited • Occasionally requires therapy: • Oxygen • nCPAP • Mechanical ventilation • Diuretics not effective • i.e. Lasix • Typically resolves by 2 days of age • No lasting sequalae
Case #2 1.2-kg male infant born vaginally at 32 weeks EGA Apgars 6, 8 Required bulb suctioning, brief PPV. Grunting, retractions, nasal flaring, acrocyanosis immediately after birth. VS: HR 178, RR 79, Mean BP 39 mmHg. O2 sat 74-78% in room air.
Case # 2 Continued • Lab: • CBC unremarkable • ABG: • 7.26/67/58/19 • CXR: “Prominent reticulogranular pattern uniformly distributed with hypoaeration of lungs. Increased air bronchograms are observed.” emedicine.com
Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS) • Also called hyaline membrane disease. • Most common cause of respiratory distress in preterm infants. • Due to structural and functional immaturity of lungs. • Underdeveloped parenchyma • Surfactant deficiency • Type II pneumatocytes • Results in decreased lung compliance, unstable alveoli www.healthline.net
RDS Continued • Risk factors • Prematurity • <28 weeks GA (≈100%) • 28-34 weeks GA (33%) • >34 weeks GA (5%) • Perinatal depression • Male predominance • Maternal diabetes • C-section • Multiple birth
Respiratory Distress Syndrome: Clinical Finings • Exam: • Moderate to severe respiratory distress • Tachypnea • Grunting • Apnea • Retractions • Nasal flaring • Cyanosis • Lab: • Moderate hypoxia • Respiratory acidosis • Metabolic acidosis (delayed) • X-ray: • Low lung volumes • Diffuse atelectasis: “ground glass opacities” • Air bronchograms • Difficult to distinguish from pneumonia emedicine.com
RDS: Typical Course • Prevention: • Antenatal bethamethasone • Arrest of preterm labor • Treatment • Oxygen supplementation • Assisted ventilation • nCPAP • mechanical ventilation • FiO2 > .40 • Exogenous surfactant replacement • Fluid restriction • Outcome • Peak severity 1-3 days • Recovery coincides with diuresis beginning at 72 hrs • Severe cases evolve into bronchopulmonary dysplasia (chronic lung disease) • Extreme prematurity • Prolonged mechanical ventilation • Sepsis
Case #3 • 4.2-kg female infant is cyanotic and tachypneic at 30 minutes of age following a vaginal delivery through meconium-stained amniotic fluid. Apgar scores were 3 and 6. She had a spontaneous but weak cry at birth and received some positive pressure ventilation followed by suctioning. • Vitals signs reveal a pulse of 169, respiratory rate of 115, and a mean BP of 55. Sats are 76% despite 100% O2 by headbox. She is barrel-chested, retracting, grunting, and has diminished coarse breath sounds bilaterally. • She is electively intubated, lines placed and labs sent.
Case # 3 Continued • Lab: • CBC: NL • ABG: 7.19/72/36 • CXR: Image: Aly H. Pediatrics in Review (2004)
Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS) • Meconium staining of amniotic fluid complicates nearly 15% of all deliveries. • Fetal distress • Primarily term and post-term • Meconium can be aspirated before, during or after delivery. • Once aspirated, meconium causes • Chemical pneumonitis • Mechanical obstruction (“ball-valve”) with severe air-trapping • Pneumothoraces (10-20%) • Surfactant inactivation • Severe hypoxemia and hypoventilation • V/Q mismatch
Meconium Aspiration Syndrome: Clinical Presentation • Exam: • Air trapping with barrel chest • Moderate to severe respiratory distress • Rales and/or rhonchi • Hypoxia with cyanosis • Hypoperfusion • Lab: • Acidosis • Respiratory and metabolic • CXR: • Hyperinflation/overdistension • Diffuse, patchy intraparenchymal opacities
Meconium Aspiration Syndrome: Typical Course • Prevention? • NRP • Treatment: • Oxygen • Mechanical ventilation • High-Frequency • Jet • Oscillator • Surfactant replacement • Complications • Sepsis/pneumonia • Airleaks • Pneumothorax/pneumopericardium • Persistent pulmonary hypertension (PPHN) • Treated with inhaled Nitric Oxide (iNO) • ECMO • Resolution • Days to weeks • Mortality 10-12%
Case #4 3.9-kg male infant develops poor feeding, tachypnea and mild oxygen need at 14 hrs of life. Exam: equal and clear breath sounds with tachypnea. Otherwise unremarkable. Labs: WBC 4.3 x 103, ABG NL, electrolytes and glucose acceptable. CXR: indyrad.iupi.edu
Congenital Pneumonia: Clinical Presentation • Most common neonatal infection • Wide variety of presenting signs • Varying degree of respiratory distress • Lethargy, poor feeding • Apnea • Temperature instability • High or low • CXR: “Can look like anything!” • Mild focal opacities • Pleural effusion(s) • Complete white-out • Normal
Pneumonia: Epidemiology • Hematogenous vs. aspiration acquisition • Antenatal, perinatal, or postnatally acquired • Common organisms: • Antenatal: rubella, CMV, HSV, adenovirus, Toxoplasma gondii, Treponema pallidum, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Listeria monocytogenes, Varicella zoster and others • Perinatal: GBS, E. coli, Klebsiella, Chlamydia trachomatis • Postnatal: adenovirus, RSV, Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, gram negative enterics
Congenital Pneumonia: Typical Course Transient oxygen need Gradual resolution of tachypnea Antibiotic (ampicillin, gentamicin) therapy 5-7 days unless complicated by sepsis or for specific organism requiring longer courses of therapy
Other Pulmonary Causes of Respiratory Distress Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia
Other Pulmonary Causes of Respiratory Distress • Esophageal atresia • Tracheoesophageal fistula www.radiographics.rnsa.org
Other Pulmonary Causes of Respiratory Distress www.medicine.cmu.ac.th Congenital Cystic Adenomatoid Malformation (CCAM) Pulmonary sequestrations
Other Pulmonary Causes of Respiratory Distress Pneumothorax Neopix (pedialink.org)
Non-Pulmonary Causes of Respiratory Distress:Congenital Heart Disease
Congenital Heart Disease • Cyanotic • Transposition of the great arteries • Total anomalous pulmonary venous return • Tricuspid atresia • Tetralogy of Fallot • Truncus arteriosus • Pulmonary atresia • Severe CHF • Ebstein’s anomaly • Double outlet right ventricle • Acyanotic • Hypoplastic left heart syndrome • Interrupted aortic arch • Critical aortic stenosis • Patent ductus arteriosus • VSD/ASD • AV canal defect • Coarctation of the aorta* • Valvular defects * May present as cyanotic or acyanotic
Congenital Heart Disease • Presenting features • Murmur +/ • Tachypnea • Cyanosis • Active precordium • Gallop rhythm • Hypoperfusion • Acidosis? • Weak pulses • Hepatomegaly • CXR • Heart size/shape • Ebstein’s anomaly • Tetralogy of Fallot • CHF • Abnormal lung vascularity • Increased • Decreased • Echocardiogram • EKG
Differentiating CHD from Pulmonary Disease Aly H. Pediatrics in Review (2004)
Initial Assessment: “ABCs” • First: • Airway • Breathing • Circulation • Next: • Stabilize • Gather data • Generate DDx • Finally: • Consult? • Manage or Transfer
Initial Assessment, continued • Identify life-threatening conditions that require prompt support • Inadequate or obstructed airway • Gasping • Choking • Stridor • Inadequate oxygenation • Cyanosis • Central vs. peripheral • Inadequate ventilation • Tachypnea • Grunting • Nasal flaring • Retractions • Inadequate perfusion • Pallor • Capillary refill
Clues from the History? • Prolonged maternal rupture of membranes? • Maternal GBS status? • Maternal fever? • Fetal distress? • Meconium? • Onset of respiratory distress? • Immediate? • Delayed?
Objective Data • Physical exam findings: • Breath sounds • Stridor • Severity • Laboratory data: • CBC w/ differential • Glucose • Blood gas • Blood culture • CXR • Hyperoxia test?
Management • Supplemental oxygen: • Blow by • Head box • Nasal cannula • Face mask • Monitoring • HR, RR • Pulse ox • How long? • 2 hrs? • 4 hrs? • Longer? • NPO
Management • Infants with TTN and no sepsis risk factors likely just need support and observation. • Infants with possible meconium aspiration, RDS, sepsis or pneumonia require a sepsis evaluation with blood culture, cbc and IV antibiotics x 48hrs and repeat CXR(s). • Unclear risk factors or presentation? • Undertake sepsis evaluation
So when to transport?! • It depends… • Failure to resolve in 2-4 hrs • Worsening condition • Perfusion • Oxygen needs • Distress • Staff ability/comfort/availability • IV access • Airway • Any suspicion of cardiac disease