Approach To Child With Wheezingpediatrics
Approach To Child With Wheezingpediatrics
Approach To Child With Wheezingpediatrics
WITH WHEEZING
PURPOSE OF THIS
PRESENTATION
Wheeze Causes of wheeze Approach to
child with wheeze History GPE Chest
Examination Tests Radiography
Pulmonary Function Tests Response to
treatment Laboratory studies ( CBC, Sweat
chloride), Endoscopy.
What is wheeze?
• Wheeze is a continuous musical sound(whistling),
longer than 250 msec, heard due to
narrowing/compression of the airways.
• Can be high-pitched or low-pitched, consists of
multiple or single notes and occurs during
inspiration or expiration.
• Monophonous (large or central airway obstruction)
Polyphonous ( Small airway narrowing)
• Heard during auscultation.
HISTORY
• Acute onset of wheeze=foreign body aspiration (hx of
choking)
• Intermittent/paroxysmal wheeze=asthma
• Persistent wheeze= sudden onset- foreign body
aspiration
• slow onset- extra luminal bronchial compression by a
growing mass or lymph node or interstitial lung disease.
• Wheeze associated with cough:
• Wet cough + wheeze=bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis, primary
ciliary dyskinesia, asthma, chronic aspiration)
• Dry cough + wheeze=asthma, airway malacia or compression,
foreign body or vascular ring
• Wheeze associated with feeding? Or any other diff like
choking/gagging/arching with feeds?
• Change in position? Worsening or improvement?
• Family hx of asthma
• Any prep tx of asthma and did it improve the condition?
• exposure to any new food?
• Child’s supervision
• Any earlier LRTI? or hx or contact with an older person with
RTI?
• Birth History:
- gestational age at the time delivery?
- was the infant intubated after birth?
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
• General examination of a wheezy child should include
-measurement of weight and height
-growth chart for s/o FTT
-vital signs specially R/R and oxygen saturation
-evaluate signs of atopic diseases: skin for eczema,
hemangioma, rash etc
-allergic shiners
-a complete chest examination, and cardiac, skin, and nasal
examinations
• The nose and throat examination should note appearance of
the nasal mucosa (eg, color, congestion), swelling of the face
or tongue, and signs of rhinitis, sinusitis, or nasal polyps.
• Check for all signs of respiratory distress:
- nasal flaring
- subcostal/supraclavilar/ recession
- cyanosis
- use of accessory muscles
- tracheal tugging
• Chest Examination:
-any chest deformities( increased AP Diameter)
-hyper-inflated chest/barel shaped/liver pushed
down
- Hoover’s sign
• Any dullness to percussion? (consolidation)
2. Vascular anomalies.
3. Bronchiectasis.
Barium Swallow:
1. GERD
2. TEF
3. VASCULAR RINGS
4. SWALLOWING DYSFUNCTION
• Other investigations:
1. Sweat chloride test: Cystic fibrosis screening in
children with chronic lung problems, failure to
thrive and diarrhea.
2. Immunoglobulin levels: screen for
immunodeficiency.
3. Rapid antigen testing, viral cultures, sputum
gram stain and culture.
Treatment
• Comfort the child
• Offer frequent liquids
• Bronchodilators
• Inhaled short acting beta-2 agonist
• Salbutamol – 100ug/ puff , 2 puffs
• Child < 5 years – inhaler + spacer
• Response unpredictable
• Ipratropium bromide
• Anticholinergic agent
• Can be used as an adjunct therapy
• Useful in tracheal or Broncho malacia
• Oral/ IV steroids
• Atopic wheeze thought to be caused by asthma
• Inhaled steroids
• Maintenance therapy in known reactive airways bujt not
in acute illnesses
• Recommended for multiple trigger wheeze
• Montelukast
• Episodic/ viral wheeze
• Started when symptoms of a viral cold develop
• No role of antibiotics unless secondary bacterial
infection
Acute bronchiolitis:-
• Hospitalize
• Mainstay treatment is supportive
• Hypoxemic – cool humidified oxygen
• Avoid sedatives
• Keep patient elevated at 30 degrees
• NG tube feeding to avoid aspiration
• Tracheal intubation
• Bronchodilators – short term improvement
• Nebulized epinephrine
• A 3-year-old boy presents to the ER with a cough, wheeze,
and increasing shortness of breath that began shortly after
the onset of a low-grade fever and rhinorrhea 24 hrs ago. His
RR is 40 bpm, HR 130 bpm and oxygen sat 89%. Examination
of the chest reveals moderate intercostal and subcostal
retractions. On auscultation, you note reduced breath
sounds throughout the lung fields with widespread
expiratory wheeze. Other than a clear nasal discharge, the
remainder of the physical examination reveals no
abnormalities.
• What would the DD be?