Bacterial tracheitis: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{Pediatric stridor DDX}} | |||
== Diagnosis== | == Diagnosis== | ||
Revision as of 13:13, 22 September 2015
Background
- Bacterial infection of tracheal epithelium
- Often secondary infection after viral illness
- S. Aureus most common, also strep spp, H. Influenza and anaerobes
- Peak age is 3-5 years old
- Occurs throughout childhood and adulthood
Clinical Features
- Severely ill child, starts out as viral prodrome
- Followed by inspiratory and expiratory stridor, resp distress, and copious purulent secretions
- Difficult to differentiate from croup and epiglottis
- Severe decompensation, high fever, purulent secretions help differentiate
- May also have concomitant pneumonia
Differential Diagnosis
Pediatric stridor
<6 Months Old
- Laryngotracheomalacia
- Accounts for 60%
- Usually exacerbated by viral URI
- Diagnosed with flexible fiberoptic laryngoscopy
- Vocal cord paralysis
- Stridor associated with feeding problems, hoarse voice, weak and/or changing cry
- May have cyanosis or apnea if bilateral (less common)
- Subglottic stenosis
- Congenital vs secondary to prolonged intubation in premies
- Airway hemangioma
- Usually regresses by age 5
- Associated with skin hemangiomas in beard distribution
- Vascular ring/sling
>6 Months Old
- Croup
- viral laryngotracheobronchitis
- 6 mo - 3 yr, peaks at 2 yrs
- Most severe on 3rd-4th day of illness
- Steeple sign not reliable- diagnose clinically
- Epiglottitis
- H flu type B
- Have higher suspicion in unvaccinated children
- Rapid onset sore throat, fever, drooling
- Difficult airway- call anesthesia/ ENT early
- H flu type B
- Bacterial tracheitis
- Rare but causes life-threatening obstruction
- Symptoms of croup + toxic-appearing = bacterial tracheitis
- Foreign body (sudden onset)
- Marked variation in quality or pattern of stridor
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Fever, neck pain, dysphagia, muffled voice, drooling, neck stiffness/torticollis/extension
Diagnosis
- Clinical diagnosis
- XR neck may show subglottic narrowing with ragged tracheal epithelium
- CXR may show concominant Pneumonia
- Emergent bronchoscopy is diagnostic and therapeutic
Treatment
- Intubation, emergent, usually necessary
- Bronchoscopy to confirm dx, rule out supraglottic pathology
- Antibiotics
- third gen cephalosporin and vanco/clinda
Disposition
- ICU admit
- Often require prolong intubation, 4-5 days
