child bronchiolitis and Asthma Flashcards

1
Q

Pathophysiology

Bronchiolitis

A

Caused by RSV (respiratory syncytial virus)
The virus replicates in epithelial cells of the bronchioles causing necrosis and shedding of the cells.
New epithelial cells not cilliated.
Lack of cillia and > secretions cause obstruction of small airways.
Impairs gaseous exchange.
Work of breathing and O2 consumption >
Diagnosis made on clinical findings.
Life long immunity usually develops following infection

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2
Q

Signs and symptoms

Bronchiolitis

A
Dry cough & wheeze		Nasal discharge
 Low grade pyrexia			Anorexia
 Tachycardia				Tachypnoea
 Recession				Head bobbing
 Nasal flaring			      Hypoxia
 Grunting	
 Fine inspiratory crackles and/or high pitched expiratory wheeze
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3
Q

High Risk factors

Bronchiolitis

A

Born at < 35/40
< 2/12 old
Congenital heart disease / Chronic lung disease of prematurity/ other comorbidities
O2 sats < 92 % in O2
Deteriorating resp status, increasing resp distress and/or exhaustion
Recurrent apnoea

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4
Q

BronchiolitisManagement

A

Aged under 2 years – referral to appropriate facility as per EMAS protocol

Provide respiratory support as required

Treatment in hospital aims to provide respiratory support.

Antivirals, antibiotics, steroids and nebulisers have been shown to be ineffective

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5
Q

Asthma

A

Commonest reason for childhood admissions to hospital in the UK.
Children still die from asthma (04/18 to 04/19 3 deaths in EMAS after assessment and left at home)
Classic features: cough, wheeze, breathlessness.
These + difficulty in walking, talking & breathlessness = worsening asthma
Decreasing relief from bronchodilators = worsening asthma

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6
Q

Pathophysiology asthma

A

Chronic bronchial inflammation resulting in narrowing of the airways.
Acute attacks- airway irritation causes smooth muscle contraction
Excessive sputum production
Swelling of bronchial mucosal
Can be due to a trigger
Air goes in (active process) but air struggles to escape due to narrowing (wheeze thus potentially leading to hyper inflated lungs and worse cases pneumothorax)

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7
Q

asthma Signs, symptoms and assessment

A

Often difficult to assess severity.
Consider: Duration, treatment, response to treatment, course of previous attacks
Wheeze & respiratory rate are a poor indicator.
Use of accessory muscles, recession & heart rate are a better guide.
Cyanosis, fatigue & drowsiness are a late sign, often accompanied by silent chest.
Peak flow if possible and O2 saturations.

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8
Q

asthma High Risk patients

A

High risk patients include those who have:
previously been hospitalised with their asthma, especially within the last year
previously been on ITU
had back to back nebs with poor or no response

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9
Q

Moderate Asthma excerbation

A

Able to talk in sentences

SPO2 > 92 %

PEFR > 50 % best/predicted

Heart rate: < 140 / min (age 2 – 5 yrs)
< 125 / min (age > 5 yrs)

Respiratory rate: < 40 / min (age 2 – 5 yrs)
< 30 / min (> 5 yrs)

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10
Q

Severe Asthma

A
Too breathless to feed/talk
 Cant complete sentences in one breath
 Recession/use of accessory muscles
 Resp rate > 40 / min (age 2 – 5 yrs)
   > 30 / min (age > 5 yrs)	
 Pulse rate > 140 / min (age 2 – 5 yrs)
	> 125 / min (age > 5 yrs)	
 Peak flow 33 - 50 % expected best
SP02 < 92 %
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11
Q

Life Threatening

A
Confusion
 Exhaustion
 Hypotension
Cyanosis
 Poor respiratory effort
 O2 sats < 92 % 
Silent chest
 Peak flow < 33 % expected best
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12
Q

asthma Management

A

Oxygen
Salbutamol- Beta2 agonist. Short acting. Smooth muscle relaxation in lungs. Onset time: 5 mins.
Ipratropium bromide – Antimuscarinic (bronchodilation). 20 min onset time
Adrenaline 1:1000 IM Paramedic Only – Technician use of this drug restricted to anaphylaxis
See JRCALC

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13
Q

Care bundle

A
resp rate
perf before treatment
02 before treatment
beta2
02
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