1 / 41

Wheezing in Children

Wheezing in Children. Mona Massoud, MD Emory University School of Medicine Family Medicine Residency 9/22/11. Introduction. Common presenting symptom of respiratory disease in children Could benign and self limiting or presenting symptom of significant respiratory disease

Télécharger la présentation

Wheezing 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. Wheezing in Children Mona Massoud, MD Emory University School of Medicine Family Medicine Residency 9/22/11

  2. Introduction • Common presenting symptom of respiratory disease in children • Could benign and self limiting or presenting symptom of significant respiratory disease • Common problems presented to PCP

  3. Incidence • 25-30% of infants will have one episode of wheezing. • By six years of age approximately half of children will have had at least one episode of wheezing

  4. Overview • Wheezing: Continuous coarse whistling sound produced by oscillation of narrowed or compressed respiratory airway. Inspiratory or expiratory/ High or low pitched. • Crackles (rales): Popping sound created when air is forced through respiratory passages. • Stridor: high-pitched harsh sound heard during inspiration, due to obstruction of upper airway.

  5. Wheezing type in childhood • Transient wheezer: One episode or few episodes of wheezing. No further episodes beyond 6 years. • Non-atopic wheezer: Wheeze during viral infections and continue to have recurrent airway obstruction during early school years. • IgE associated wheeze/asthma: Start to have symptoms later in life which continues into adulthood.

  6. Wheezing Type in Childhood

  7. Why do Children tend to wheeze more than Adults? • Children have smaller airway passages, therefore higher resistance • Less chest compliance • Elastic tissue recoil is lower than adults and fewer collateral airways-prone to obstruction and atelectasis

  8. Differential Diagnosis • Acute • Asthma • Bronchitis • Bronchiolitis • Laryngeotracheobronchitis (Croup) • Bacterial Tracheitis • FB aspiration • Esophageal FB

  9. Chronic or Recurrent Causes • Asthma • GERD • Retained foreign body • Cystic Fibrosis • Recurrent Aspiration • Primary ciliary dyskinesia • ILD • Immunodeficiency • Structural Causes: • Tracheo-bronchomalacia • Vascular rings • Tracheal web • Cystic lesions/lymphadenopathy/mediastinal masses

  10. Asthma • Affects approximately 5 million children in US • Chronic and reversible inflammatory disorder that produces airway hyper-responsiveness, airway inflammation and airflow limitation. • Immediate and delayed inflammatory response

  11. Classification of Asthma

  12. Asthma Control assessment

  13. Bronchiolitis • Children less than 2 yo, usually 3-6 m • Viruses-RSV (most common), adenovirus, influenza or parainfluenza • Fall and winter months • Begins as mild URI which can progress to increase respiratory distress • Rx: • Supportive therapy • Ribavirin in extremely ill children

  14. Croup vs Epiglottitis

  15. Approach to a wheezing child • Clinical History: • Wheeze description from parents Snoring, snoring, rattling or gargling noises • Patient age at onset of wheeze Distinguishes congenital vs non-congenital • Course: acute vs gradual Acute onset- FB aspiration

  16. Cont’d Q’s • Pattern of wheezing? • Episodic: asthma • Persistent: congenital • Response to bronchodilators? • Improvement: Asthma • Is Wheezing associated with multiple respiratory illnesses? • Cystic fibrosis and Immunodeficiency diseases

  17. Cont’d Q’s • Wheeze associated with feeding? GERD • Wheeze associated with cough? GERD, asthma, allergies • Change in position? Worsening or improvement Tracheomalacia • Family hx of asthma?

  18. Features that favors diagnosis of Asthma • Intermittent episodes of asthma • Presence of a trigger • URI • Allergens • Exercise • Seasonal variation • Family hx of asthma and/or atopy • Response to bronchodilators

  19. Clinical features that suggest a diagnosis other than asthma: • Hx of wheezing since birth or neonatal respiratory problems. • Hx of choking associated with SOB and coughing. • Symptoms that change with position. • Poor weight gain and recurrent infections. • Hx of progressive dyspnea, tachypnea, exercise intolerance. • Poor response to broncholdilators.

  20. Physical Examination • Vital signs including Sa02 % • Inspection: • Respiratory distress/ tachypnea/ cyanosis • Retractions or structural abnormalities (increased AP diameter, pectus excavatum, scoliosis) • HENT: allergic shiners/nasal polyps • Skin: eczema

  21. Cont’d PE • Palpation: chest wall asymmetry with expansion, tracheal deviation or supratracheal lymphadenopathy • Percussion: difference in vocal resonance and define position of diaphragm • Auscultation: • Location of wheeze • Character of wheeze • Other breath sounds associated with wheeze • Cardiac: presence of murmur or gallops

  22. Diagnostic Evaluation • CXR: AP and lateral views • Children with new onset wheezing of undetermined etiology • Chronic persistent wheezing not responding to treatment • Lateral decubitus views: FB aspiration • Chest radiography is not performed with every asthma exacerbation unless there is a specific indication

  23. CXR findings: • Hyperinflation: • Generalized: suggests diffuse air trapping • Asthma/ Cystic fibrosis/ Primary ciliary dyskinesia • Localized hyperinflation: • Structural abnormalities/ FB aspiration • Other findings: atelectasis, bronchiectasis, mediastinal masses, enlarged LN’s, cardiomegaly, enlarged pulmonary vessels or pulmonary edema.

  24. Status Asthmaticus

  25. Croup (Steeple Sign):

  26. FB occludes middle lobe bronchus Atelectasis of Rt middle lobe Hyperinflation of upper and lower lobes FB aspiration

  27. Other radiological studies: • Chest CT scan: • Mediastinal masses or LN’s • Vascular anomalies • Bronchiectasis • Barium Swallow: • GERD • TEF • Vascular rings • Swallowing dysfunction

  28. Vascular ring

  29. TEF

  30. Pulmonary Function Tests (PFT’s) • Airway obstruction assessment • PFT’s with inspiratory and expiratory flow-volume loops is is important in determining the degree, location of airway obstruction in addition to response to bronchodilators.

  31. Response to Treatment • Trial of inhaled bronchodilators • Improvement: reversible airway disease • Partial or negative response: asthma or other causes • Combination of inhaled CST +bronchodilators: if asthma is suspected in a patient with chronic or persistent symptoms

  32. Bronchodilator response

  33. Other Investigations • Sweat Chloride Test: Cystic fibrosis screening in children with chronic lung problems, failure to thrive and diarrhea • Immunoglobulin levels: Screen for immunodeficiencies. • Rapid antigen testing, viral cultures, sputum gram stain and culture. PPD in suspected cases.

  34. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VA9C_aCH7F0 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMKxnyPs7K8&feature=related • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qbn1Zw5CTbA&feature=related

  35. References • http://www.aafp.org • http://www.uptodate.com/contents • http://emedicine.medscape.com • http://www.essentialevidenceplus.com • http://www.acaai.org/patients/resources/asthma/Documents/AZnhlbiGuidelines • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0001970/ • http://www.medcyclopaedia.com/library/radiology • http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/123/3/e519.long

More Related