1 / 18

CROUP

CROUP. Dr Jonny Taitz Sydney Children’s Hospital, Randwick April 2003. Introduction. Croup or LTB laryngo tracheo bronchitis is a clinical syndrome Hoarse voice Barking cough Inspiratory stridor COMMON cause of upper airway obstruction usually mild & self limiting

libitha
Télécharger la présentation

CROUP

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. CROUP Dr Jonny Taitz Sydney Children’s Hospital, Randwick April 2003

  2. Introduction • Croup or LTB laryngo tracheo bronchitis is a clinical syndrome • Hoarse voice • Barking cough • Inspiratory stridor • COMMON cause of upper airway obstruction usually mild & self limiting • BUT is also the commonest cause of potentially life threatening airway obstruction in childhood

  3. Anatomically • Viral infection of upper airway • Inflammation of larynx, trachea & bronchi • Compromises airflow through proximal airway

  4. Causes & Differential • Commonest cause is viral (parainfluenza, RSV) • Very rarely  diphtherial croup (non immunized)

  5. Causes & Differential • Foreign Body Inhalation • Sudden onset • May have unilateral signs • Exp wheeze > insp stridor • Structural • Children < 3/12 • Combination insp & exp stridor • (eg. Subglotic stenosis, laryngomalacia, laryngeal cysts, webs, thermal, chemical injury)

  6. Causes & Differential • Toxic • Exclude bacterial tracheitis • Epigloltitis • Retropharyngeal abscess

  7. Assessment of Severity • Remember it is the severity of the airway obstruction NOT the stridor that is assessed • Worsening obstruction may lead to softer stridor !!! • Repeated clinical assessment is the key

  8. Airway Obstruction • Mild • Moderate • Moderate progressing to severe • Severe

  9. Danger Signs • General: agitated, tiring,  LOC  observe closely • Resp distress: stridor at rest, tracheal tug, retractions pulsus Paradoxus  will need RX • Cyanosis / extreme pallor  RX immediately • Oxymetry is a late sign • Do not wait for desaturation to commence RX

  10. Mild Airway Obstruction • Happy child, playful, tolerating fluids • Mild chest wall retractions, tachycardia • NO stridor at rest • MX • Reassure parents • Counsel parents re: warning signs • No medication required

  11. Moderate Airway Obstruction • Characterised by • Stridor at rest • Accessory muscle use, chest wall retractions •  HR,  RR • Child is interactive & can be placated • MX • Will require corticosteriods • Observation for a minimum of 4 hours • Further RX if child progresses to severe obstruction

  12. Progression from Moderate to Severe Airway Obstruction • Child will need admission • Child becomes preoccupied, tired, sleepy • Close monitoring • Regular review every 30-60 mins • MX • Corticosteriods • Nebulized Adrenaline

  13. Severe Airway Obstruction • Characterised by • Tiredness, exhaustion, tachycardia • Restless, agitated •  LOC • Hypotonic, pale & cyanosed • MX • Do not disturb unnecessarily • O2 via face mask • Nebulized Adrenaline • Intubation (under anaesthetic) & ventilation • Systemic steroids when airway secure } Late signs indicating imminent airway obstruction

  14. What Evidence is there for Current Rx Options • Non pharmacologic • Steam • 2 large RCT’s looked at steam Rx in croup • No evidence that it is beneficial • Oxygen • Initial treatment of choice for children with moderate to severe viral croup

  15. What Evidence is there for Current Rx Options • Drugs • Steroids • Precise mechanism in croup unclear • ? Ante-inflammatry • ? Vasoconstricts upper airway • Oral preferred route • Dexamethazone 0.3 mg/kg • Prednisore 1 mg/kg • Steriods have led to •  intubation •  Duration of ventilation • nebulized budesonide vs oral dexamethazone

  16. Drugs (continued) • Nebulized Adrenaline • Moderate to severe croup (i.e stridor at rest) needs nebulized adrenaline • Dose 0.5 mg/kg 1:1000 (max 5 mls) • Administered neat via neb • Effect •  Bronchial & tracheal epithelial vascular permeability •  Airway oedema • Onset is rapid  30 minutes • Duration is approx 2 hrs • Severe croup may need repeated doses

  17. Drugs (continued) • Ongoing requirements for Nebulized Adrenaline • Consider intubation and/or transfer to Paediatric ICU • Other factors to consider for transfer • Age of child • Severity of illness • Underlying anatomic problems • Level of exposure at hospital

  18. Questions

More Related