1 / 79

Respiratory Diseases in Children

Respiratory Diseases in Children. Christine T. Quien-Sua, MD DPPS DPAPP Pediatric Pulmonology January 18, 2010. Respiratory System: Upper respiratory tract Lower respiratory tract. Choanal atresia Foreign body Common cold Sinusitis Pharyngitis

osanna
Download Presentation

Respiratory Diseases in Children

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Respiratory Diseases in Children Christine T. Quien-Sua, MD DPPS DPAPP Pediatric Pulmonology January 18, 2010

  2. Respiratory System: • Upper respiratory tract • Lower respiratory tract

  3. Choanal atresia Foreign body Common cold Sinusitis Pharyngitis Retropharyngeal/ lateral pharyngeal abscess Laryngomalacia Croup Acute Epiglotittis Obstructive Sleep Apnea Upper Respiratory Tract Disorders

  4. Choanal Atresia • Most common congenital anomaly of the nose • Bony (90%) or membranous (10%) septum • CHARGE syndrome - Coloboma, Heart , Atresia, Retarted growth, Genital and Ear • Clinically unilateral - asymptomatic bilateral - difficulty in breathing with cyanosis relieved when crying

  5. Choanal Atresia

  6. Choanal Atresia • Diagnosis: inability to pass a catheter through each nostril 3-4 cm into the nasopharynx rhinoscopy or HRCT scan • Treatment: • Supportive: oral airway, intubation or tracheostomy; NGT • Definitive: Surgery

  7. Foreign Body (Nose) • Symptoms: • Local obstruction, sneezing, mild discomfort, pain • Disk batteries – most dangerous because it leach in matters of hours • Diagnosis: • Unilateral nasal discharge and/or obstruction • Nasal speculum/ otoscope • Complications: • Tetanus • Toxic shock syndrome

  8. The Common Cold • Most common upper respiratory tract infection (AURI), rhinitis, nasopharyngitis • Viral illness • Rhinovirus - the most common pathogen • Coronavirus, RSV • 6-7 colds / year • 10-15% of children have at least 12 infections per year

  9. The Common Cold • Sore or “scratchy” throat • Nasal obstruction • Rhinorrhea • Cough • duration - 1 week • 10% - last for 2 weeks

  10. Common cold • P.E. limited to the upper respiratory tract • A change in color or consistency of the secretions is common during the course of illness and is NOTindicative of sinusitis or bacterial superinfection

  11. Table 364-2 Conditions that May Mimic the Common Cold p. 1390 Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics 17th ed p

  12. The Common Cold: Treatment • Fever - acetaminophen • Nasal obstruction -adrenergic agents as decongestants • Rhinorrhea - first generation anti-histamine due to the anticholinergic effect • Sore throat - mild analgesics • Cough - due to postnasal drip; due to virus-induced reactive airway disease-antihistamine/bronchodilator

  13. The Common Cold: Treatment Ineffective Treatments: • Vitamin C • Guaifenesin • Inhalation of warm, humidified air • Zinc • Echinacea -herbal treatment

  14. Common cold: Complications • Otitis media - most common • Sinusitis • Asthma exacerbation • Inappropriate us of antibiotics – antibiotic resistance

  15. Sinusitis • Etiology: viral or bacterial • Clinical signs suggestive of acute bacterial sinusitis • Persistent signs/symptoms of URTI of > 14 days without improvement • Severe respiratory symptoms (e.g. temp >39 C) • Purulent nasal discharge for 3-4 consecutive days • Common bacterial pathogens of acute sinusitis Streptococcus pneumonia H. influenza Moraxella catarrhalis

  16. Sinusitis • Persistent symptoms of URI – nasal congestion/discharge, fever & cough • Less common symptoms: halithosis, decreased sense of smell, periorbital edema • P.E. mild erythema/swelling of nasal mucosa with nasal discharge • Sinus tenderness in adolescents

  17. Diagnosis: Sinusitis • Transillumination of sinus cavities • Sinus plain films and CT scan • Opacification, mucosal thickening, presence of air-fluid level • Sinus aspirate culture • not practical for routine use

  18. Sinusitis - Treatment • Amoxicillin (45mkday) • Amoxicillin-clavulanate (80-90mkday) • Cephalosphorins • Clarithromycin, Azithromycin • Duration: continue for 7 days after resolution of symptoms

  19. Sinusitis - Complications • Eye complications: • peri-orbital/ orbital cellulitis • Intracranial complications: • Meningitis • cavernous sinus thrombosis • abscess

  20. Acute pharyngitis • Etiology: Group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus (GABHS) , virus • Uncommon before 2-3 years old • Peak incidence: 4-7 years old • Sore throat as the primary symptom

  21. Viral pharyngitis • Presence of 2 or more of these signs and symptoms suggest viral infection: • Conjuctivitis - stomatitis • Rhinitis - discrete ulcerative lesions • Cough - viral exanthem • Hoarseness diarrhea • Coryza

  22. Streptococcal pharyngitis • M protein- major virulence factor that resists phagocytosis • Physical examination: • red pharynx • enlarged tonsils with yellow blood-tinged exudate • petechiae on the soft palate and posterior pharynx • enlarged/tender anterior cervical lymph nodes • Diagnosis: Throat culture - gold standard

  23. Streptococcal pharyngitis

  24. Treatment • Penicillin V -250mg/dose bid or tid x 10 days • Amoxicillin - 750mg OD x 10d 50mkday bid x 6 days • Benzathine Pen IM - 600,000 U for < 27kgs - 1.2M units • Erythromycin 40mkday tid or qid x 10days

  25. Strep. pharyngitis • Prevention of acute rheumatic fever is successful if treatment started within 9 days of illness • Clindamycin (20mkday) - recommended for carriers

  26. Retropharyngeal and lateral pharyngeal abscess • ETIOLOGY: • Complication of bacterial pharyngitis • Extension of infection from vertebral osteomyelitis • Dental infection • Trauma • Group A hemolytic strep., anaerobes, Staph. aureus

  27. Retropharyngeal and lateral pharyngeal abscess • Clinical manifestations: • With hx of acute nasopharyngitis • Abrupt onset of fever, difficulty of swallowing, refusal to feed, severe distress with throat pain, hyperextension of head, drooling • P.E. • Bulge in posterior pharyngeal wall

  28. Retropharyngeal and lateral pharyngeal abscess • Lateral x-ray of the neck • Retropharyngeal soft tissue is thick • Retropharyngeal air • Loss of N cervical lordosis • Treatment • IV antibiotics with or without surgical drainage • 3rd gen cephalosporins+ Sulbactam-ampi or Clindamycin

  29. Laryngomalacia • Most common congenital laryngeal anomaly • Most frequent cause of stridor in infants and children • Stridor appear at 2 weeks of life • Increase in severity up to 6 months • Diagnosis: flexible bronchoscopy • Treatment: observation - spontaneously resolve

  30. Acute Inflammatory Upper Airway Obstruction Viral agents accounts for most acute infectious upper airway obstructions except in: Diphtheria Bacterial tracheitis Acute epiglottitis

  31. Laryngotracheobronchitis (Croup) • Heterogeneous group of mainly acute and infectious processes • brassy or bark-like cough • hoarseness, inspiratory stridor, respiratory distress • Parainfluenza viruses (type 1,2,3) - 75% of cases • age group: 3 mos - 5 y/o • peak 2y/o • Diagnosis is clinical

  32. Soft tissue neck radiograph Laryngotracheobronchitis Epiglotittis “steeple sign” “thumb sign” Postero-anterior view lateral view

  33. Croup -Treatment • Airway • Cool mist • Nebulized racemic epinephrine 0.25 to 0.75mL of 2.25% of epi in 3mL NSS q 20mins duration < 2 hrs • Corticosteroids Dexamethasone IM - 0.6mg/kg single dose or 0.15mg/kg Budesonide nebulized - 2mg • Helium-oxygen mixture

  34. Acute Epiglottitis • Etiology: H. influenza type B • Clinically: high grade fever, fever, rapidly progressing dyspnea • barking cough is rare • PE: “cherry red”epiglottis • lateral radiograph of the upper airway

  35. Treatment • Establish the airway! • Don’t forget oxygen • Ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, sulbactam-ampi for 7-10 days • Rifampicin prophylaxis (20mg/kg OD x 4 days)

  36. Bacterial Tracheitis • Complication of a viral disease • Life-threatening • < 3 years old • High grade fever, brassy cough, respiratory distress, “toxic” BUT does NOT drool and no dysphagia and can lie flat in bed • copious purulent secretions with pseudomembrane • mucosal swelling at the level of cricoid cartilage • Etiology : Staphylococcus aureus • Treatment: Airway, antibiotics and O2 support

  37. Obstructive Sleep Apnea DEFINITION: • Disorder of breathing during sleep with prolonged partial upper airway obstruction and/or intermittent complete obstruction that disrupts normal ventilation during sleep

  38. OSA • Prevalence rate: 0.7% -3% • Peak: preschool (2-5y/o) male = female • Adenotonsillar hypertrophy – the most common anatomic predisposing factor • REM sleep – the most common functional predisposing factor

  39. OSA • No direct correlation between tonsil size and severity of OSA. • Habitual snoring – most common symptom • Triad of symptoms: • Snoring • Nocturnal breathing difficulties • Witnessed respiratory pauses

  40. OSA • Overnight recording of multiple physiologic sensors during sleep (POLYSOMNOGRAPHY) – gold standard for diagnosis • Treatment: Adenotonsillectomy • Complications if untreated: • Failure to thrive • Pulmonary hypertension • Cor pulmonale

  41. Disorders of the Lower Respiratory Tract • Foreign body aspiration • Bronchitis • Bronchiolitis • Pneumonia • Bronchial Asthma • Pneumothorax • Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

  42. Foreign Body Aspiration • Older infants and toddlers • With or without history of choking • May present with wheezing, stridor, chronic cough • Most common : peanuts • Chest x-ray: air trapping, atelectasis • Rigid bronchoscopy – diagnostic and therapeutic

  43. Acute Bronchitis • Protracted cough lasting for 1-3 weeks • Damaged or hypersensitized tracheobronchial epithelium • Preceded by a viral URTI • afebrile, cough ( dry or purulent) , chest pain • PE: coarse and fine crackles , wheezing • Chest xray: Normal or increase bronchial markings • IMPORTANT to exclude pneumonia • Self - limited and require NO treatment

  44. Acute Bronchiolitis • Common disease of the lower respiratory tract in infants • Age group: 3 months - 2 y/o • Etiology: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) • Clinical: fever, rhinorrhea --- gradual respiratory distress, dyspnea and irritability • Absence of other systemic complaints as diarrhea or vomiting

  45. Acute Bronchiolitis • PE: tachypnea, nasal flaring, retractions predominantly wheezing • Chest radiograph: hyperinflation with patchy atelectasis

  46. Bronchiolitis-Treatment • The first 48-72hrs after onset of cough and dyspnea is the most critical • Humidified O2 • Position - head and chest elevated and neck extended • NPO and IV fluids • Bronchodilators and nebulized epinephrine • Ribavirin - thru aerosol tx used for infants with CHD and chronic lung disease • Corticosteroid and antibiotics - NO benefit

More Related