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Respiratory Disorders. Jan Bazner-Chandler CPNP, CNS, MSN, RN. Respiratory . Bifurcation of trachea. Change in chest wall shape. Upper Airway Characteristics. Narrow tracheo-bronchial lumen until age 5 Tonsils, adenoids, epiglottis proportionately larger in children
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Respiratory Disorders Jan Bazner-Chandler CPNP, CNS, MSN, RN
Respiratory Bifurcation of trachea Change in chest wall shape
Upper Airway Characteristics • Narrow tracheo-bronchial lumen until age 5 • Tonsils, adenoids, epiglottis proportionately larger in children • Tracheo-bronchial cartilaginous rings collapse easily
Lower Airway Characteristics • Fewer alveoli in the neonate • Poor quality of alveoli until age 8 • Lack of surfactant that lines the alveoli in the premature infant • Inhibits alveolar collapse at end of expiration
Respiratory Characteristics • Basal metabolic rate is greater thus greater oxygen consumption • Immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels reach low point around 5 months of age
Focused Physical Assessment • Types of breathing: • Less than 7 years abdominal breathing • Greater than 7 years abdominal breathing can indicate problems
Respiratory Rate • Inspiratory phase slightly longer or equal to expiratory phase • Prolonged expiratory phase = asthma • Prolonged inspiratory phase = upper airway obstruction • Croup • Foreign body
Color • Observe color of face, trunk, and nail beds • Cyanosis = inadequate oxygenation • Clubbing of nails = chronic hypoxemia
Respiratory Distress • Grunting = impending respiratory failure • Severe retractions • Diminished or absent breath sounds • Apnea or gasping respirations • Poor systemic perfusion / mottling • Tachycardia to bradycardia = late sign • Decrease oxygen saturations
Chest Retractions • Retractions suggest an obstruction to inspiration at any point in the respiratory tract. • As intrapleural pressure becomes increasingly negative, the musculature “pulls back” in an effort to overcome the blockage. • The degree and level of retraction depend on the extent and level of the obstruction.
Diagnostic Tests • Detects abnormalities of chest or lungs • Chest x-ray • Sweat chloride Test • MRI • Laryngoscope / bronchoscopy • CT Scan
X-ray Hyperinflation of Lung Vh.org
Pleural Effusion X-Ray vh.org
Sweat Chloride Test • Analysis of sodium and chloride • Contents in sweat • Gold Standard for diagnosis • May do genetic screening earlier • if positive family history Ball & Bindler
Foreign Body Aspiration A foreign body in one or the other of the bronchi causes unilateral retractions. *usually the right due to broader bore and more vertical placement.
Oxygen Therapy: Nursing Interventions • Proper concentration • Adequate humidity: make sure there is fluid in the bottle • Make sure prongs are in nose and that the nares are patent – suction out nares to increase oxygen flow • Monitor oxygen SATS: if alarm keeps on going off but the infant / child looks good, check the device • Monitor activity level or infant / child
Aerosol Therapy • Respiratory Therapist will do the treatment • Communicate with therapist – eliminated needless paging for treatments • Treatment should be done before the infant eats • When you make your morning rounds assess if there is any infant / child that needs an immediate treatment
Home Teaching Inhaled Medications • Correct dosage • Prescribed time • Proper use of inhaler • No OTC drugs • Encourage fluids • When to call physician
Aerosol Therapy Medication administered by oxygen or compressed air. Ball & Bindler
CPT • In the small child you can position on your lap • Do first thing in the AM • Do before meals or one hour after • Do after the aerosol treatment since the treatment will help open the airways and loosen the mucous • Suction the infant after treatment – teach parents to do bulb suction – RN, LVN or RT to deep suction prn
Severe Respiratory Distress • Nasal flaring and grunting • Severe retractions • Diminished breath sounds • Hypotonia • Decreased oxygen saturations
What to do if infant / child in respiratory distress! • Stimulate the infant / child - remember crying or activity will help mobilize secretions and expand lungs • Have the older child sit up take deep breaths and cough • CPT to loosen secretions and suction! suction! suction! • Give oxygen • Assess if interventions work • Call for help if you need it – pull the emergency cord – yell for help
Symptoms • Itching of nose, eyes, and throat • Sneezing and stuffiness • Watery nasal discharge / post nasal drip • Watery eyes • Swelling around the eyes
Rhinitis Treatment • Antihistamines • Competitive inhibitors for histamine at the mast cell receptor sites • Benadryl – OTC medication • Prescription –Cromolyn or steroid nasal spray • Environmental changes - avoidance of allergens • Do not use combination OTC medications especially those that contain pseudoephedrine
Sinusitis Sinuses not fully developed until age 12. Adam.com Sinuses are hollow cavities within the facial bones.
Sinusitis Symptoms • Fever • Purulent rhinorrhea • Pain in facial area • Malodorous breath • Chronic night-time cough Children more prone to sinusitis: children with asthma and cystic fibrosis.
Treatment • Normal saline nose drops • Warm pack to face • Acetaminophen for pain • Increase po fluid intake • Antibiotics • Recent studies question their effectiveness
Tonsillitis “Kissing tonsils” occur when the tonsils are so enlarged they touch each other.
Tonsillitis • Inflammation of the tonsils. • Part of the immune system to trap and kill bacteria and viruses traveling through the body.
Tonsillitis • Child may refuse to drink • Night snoring = enlarged tonsils or adenoids • Size of tonsils are obstructing airway
Treatment • Antibiotics x ten days if positive for beta strep • Acetaminophen for pain • Cool fluids • Saline gargles • Antiseptic sprays • Viral throat infections will not get better faster with antibiotics.
Tonsillectomy • Done if child’s respiratory status is compromised • Post operative care: • Side lying position • Ice collar • Watch for swallowing • Cool fluids / soft diet
Croup • Laryngotracheobronchitis or Acute spasmotic croup • Infants from 3 months to about 3 years • Respiratory symptoms are caused by inflammation of the larynx and upper airway, with resultant narrowing of the airway.
Symptoms • Symptoms: • Hoarseness • Inspiratory stridor • Barking cough • Afebrile • Often worsens at night
Management • Home care: • Cool mist • Fluids • Hospital care: • Racemic epinephrine inhalant • Mist tent – not used much anymore • Dexamethasone: IV over 1 to several minutes
Pertussis or whooping cough • Agent: Bordetella Pertussis • Source: respiratory • Transmission: droplet • Incubation: 10 days • Period of communicability: before onset of paroxysms to 4 weeks after onset
Management • Respiratory support as needed • Suctioning • Oxygen to keep oxygen saturation at > 98 % • Nutritional support • IV fluids • Erythromycin, Zithromax or Biaxin for child and all exposed family members
Isolation Precautions • Transmission through direct contact with discharges from respiratory mucous of infected persons. • Highly contagious with up to 90% of household contacts developing disease after contact. • Respiratory and contact isolation for 3-4 days after the initiation of antibiotic therapy.
Epiglottitis Bowden & Greenberg Tripod position
Epiglottitis Symptoms • Acute inflammation of supra-glottic structures. • Medical Emergency • Sudden onset • High fever • Dysphasia and drooling • Epiglottis is cherry red and swollen