Acute dyspnea (peds): Difference between revisions
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{{PediatricPage|acute dyspnea}} | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*Breathing complaints common in | *Breathing complaints are among the most common reasons for pediatric ED visits<ref>Gehri M, et al. [Acute dyspnea in children]. Rev Med Suisse. 2005 Feb 16;1(7):486-90. PMID 15790016</ref> | ||
*Infants | *Infants and children have higher predisposition to respiratory failure relative to adults | ||
**Higher resting metabolic rate requires more oxygen | **Higher resting metabolic rate requires more oxygen | ||
**Anatomical differences (e.g. smaller diameter airways) predispose to respiratory failure | **Anatomical differences (e.g. smaller diameter airways) predispose to respiratory failure — 1mm of edema causes 60% reduction in cross-sectional area in an infant vs. 20% in an adult | ||
** | **Cartilaginous rib cage with less respiratory reserve | ||
*Included here are other respiratory chief complaints | **Obligate nose breathers until approximately 6 months of age | ||
*The vast majority of pediatric cardiac arrests are secondary to respiratory failure | |||
*Included here are other respiratory chief complaints: tachypnea, irregular breathing, abnormal respiratory sounds, cyanosis, which parents may have noticed | |||
==Clinical Features== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
===Signs of Respiratory Distress=== | |||
*Tachypnea (most sensitive early sign) | |||
*Increased work of breathing: nasal flaring, retractions (subcostal, intercostal, suprasternal), head bobbing (infants) | |||
*Accessory muscle use, tripoding | |||
*Grunting (sign of impending respiratory failure — creates auto-PEEP) | |||
*Cyanosis (late and ominous sign) | |||
*Altered mental status, poor tone (impending respiratory arrest) | |||
== | ===Signs of Respiratory Failure=== | ||
=== | *Decreased or absent breath sounds | ||
* | *Bradypnea or irregular respirations | ||
*Poor air exchange despite increased effort | |||
*Apnea, agonal breathing | |||
*Altered mental status, unresponsiveness | |||
===Key Physical Exam Findings by Etiology=== | |||
*'''Stridor''': upper airway obstruction ([[croup]], [[epiglottitis]], foreign body, [[anaphylaxis]])<ref>Fallot A. Respiratory distress. Pediatr Ann. 2005 Nov;34(11):885-91; quiz 893-4. PMID 16353650</ref> | |||
*Wheezing: lower airway disease ([[bronchiolitis]], [[asthma]], foreign body) | |||
*Crackles: pneumonia, pulmonary edema, bronchiolitis | |||
*[[ | *Absent breath sounds: [[pneumothorax]], large [[pleural effusion]], severe bronchospasm | ||
*Barking cough: [[croup]] | |||
* | |||
*[[ | |||
*[[ | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | |||
{{Pediatric SOB DDX}} | |||
=== | ==Evaluation== | ||
* | ===Immediate Assessment=== | ||
* | *ABCs — do not delay treatment for workup | ||
* | *Pulse oximetry (continuous if distressed) | ||
* | *Bedside glucose | ||
*Assess position of comfort (allow child to remain in parent's lap if stable) | |||
=== | ===Laboratory=== | ||
*[[Blood gas]] (capillary or venous): assess pH, pCO2 (rising CO2 = impending failure) | |||
*[[ | *[[CBC]] if infection suspected | ||
*[[BMP]] if metabolic cause suspected | |||
*[[BNP]] if cardiac etiology considered | |||
*Blood culture if sepsis concern | |||
*[[ | |||
* | |||
== | ===Imaging=== | ||
*[[CXR]]: infiltrate, hyperinflation, pneumothorax, cardiomegaly, foreign body | |||
*Lateral neck radiograph if concern for [[epiglottitis]] or [[retropharyngeal abscess]] (only if stable) | |||
*CT angiography rarely needed (suspected [[pulmonary embolism]], vascular ring) | |||
===Bedside=== | |||
*[[POCUS]]: assess for pneumothorax, pleural effusion, pericardial effusion, B-lines (pulmonary edema), cardiac function | |||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
===Immediate Interventions=== | |||
*Position of comfort | |||
*Supplemental oxygen for SpO2 <90% (or <94% in neonates with known cardiac disease per local protocols) | |||
*Bag-valve-mask ventilation if apneic or inadequate respirations | |||
*Prepare for [[intubation (peds)]] / [[Neonatal RSI]] if impending respiratory failure | |||
*[[Epinephrine]] IM if [[anaphylaxis]] suspected | |||
*[[Needle decompression]] if tension pneumothorax suspected | |||
===Condition-Specific=== | |||
*[[Croup]]: [[dexamethasone]] PO/IM, racemic [[epinephrine]] nebulized for moderate-severe | |||
*[[Bronchiolitis]]: supportive care (suctioning, oxygen), high-flow nasal cannula if needed | |||
*[[Asthma]]: [[albuterol]], [[ipratropium]], systemic [[corticosteroids]]; consider [[magnesium sulfate]] for severe | |||
*[[Pneumonia]]: antibiotics based on age and severity | |||
*[[Foreign body aspiration]]: if complete obstruction, follow BLS choking algorithm; bronchoscopy for partial obstruction | |||
*'''[[Epiglottitis]]''': minimize agitation, call anesthesia/ENT, OR for controlled intubation | |||
*[[Pneumothorax]]: [[needle decompression]] followed by [[chest tube (peds)|chest tube]] | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
===Admit / PICU=== | |||
*Respiratory failure or impending respiratory failure | |||
*Requiring supplemental oxygen beyond brief ED course | |||
*Significant work of breathing not improving with treatment | |||
*Toxic appearance or altered mental status | |||
*Need for continuous monitoring or frequent treatments | |||
*Suspected epiglottitis, retropharyngeal abscess, or other surgical airway emergency | |||
===Discharge=== | |||
*Resolved symptoms after treatment (e.g., mild croup responding to steroids) | |||
*Mild asthma exacerbation responding to bronchodilators with normal SpO2 on room air | |||
*Reliable caregivers with clear return precautions | |||
*Return precautions: increased work of breathing, poor feeding, color change, altered behavior, fever | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Acute dyspnea]] | |||
*[[Intubation (peds)]] | |||
*[[Neonatal RSI]] | |||
*[[PALS]] | |||
*[[Stridor (peds)]] | |||
*[[Croup]] | |||
*[[Bronchiolitis (peds)]] | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Pediatrics]] | [[Category:Pediatrics]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | |||
[[Category:Pulmonology]] | |||
Latest revision as of 10:44, 22 March 2026
This page is for pediatric patients. For adult patients, see: acute dyspnea
Background
- Breathing complaints are among the most common reasons for pediatric ED visits[1]
- Infants and children have higher predisposition to respiratory failure relative to adults
- Higher resting metabolic rate requires more oxygen
- Anatomical differences (e.g. smaller diameter airways) predispose to respiratory failure — 1mm of edema causes 60% reduction in cross-sectional area in an infant vs. 20% in an adult
- Cartilaginous rib cage with less respiratory reserve
- Obligate nose breathers until approximately 6 months of age
- The vast majority of pediatric cardiac arrests are secondary to respiratory failure
- Included here are other respiratory chief complaints: tachypnea, irregular breathing, abnormal respiratory sounds, cyanosis, which parents may have noticed
Clinical Features
Signs of Respiratory Distress
- Tachypnea (most sensitive early sign)
- Increased work of breathing: nasal flaring, retractions (subcostal, intercostal, suprasternal), head bobbing (infants)
- Accessory muscle use, tripoding
- Grunting (sign of impending respiratory failure — creates auto-PEEP)
- Cyanosis (late and ominous sign)
- Altered mental status, poor tone (impending respiratory arrest)
Signs of Respiratory Failure
- Decreased or absent breath sounds
- Bradypnea or irregular respirations
- Poor air exchange despite increased effort
- Apnea, agonal breathing
- Altered mental status, unresponsiveness
Key Physical Exam Findings by Etiology
- Stridor: upper airway obstruction (croup, epiglottitis, foreign body, anaphylaxis)[2]
- Wheezing: lower airway disease (bronchiolitis, asthma, foreign body)
- Crackles: pneumonia, pulmonary edema, bronchiolitis
- Absent breath sounds: pneumothorax, large pleural effusion, severe bronchospasm
- Barking cough: croup
Differential Diagnosis
Pediatric Shortness of Breath
Pulmonary/airway
- Airway obstruction
- Structural
- Infectious
- Other
Cardiac
- Congenital heart disease
- Vascular ring
- Cardiac tamponade
- Congestive Heart Failure (peds)
- Myocarditis (peds)
Other diseases with abnormal respiration
- Normal neonatal periodic breathing (misinterpreted by caregivers as abnormal)
- Brief resolved unexplained event
- Anemia
- Abdominal distension (e.g. SBO, liver failure
- Neonatal abstinence syndrome
- Decreased perfusion states
- Metabolic acidosis
- CO Poisoning
- Diaphragm injury
- Renal Failure
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Organophosphate toxicity
- Tick paralysis
- Fever (Peds)
- Panic attack
- Porphyria
Evaluation
Immediate Assessment
- ABCs — do not delay treatment for workup
- Pulse oximetry (continuous if distressed)
- Bedside glucose
- Assess position of comfort (allow child to remain in parent's lap if stable)
Laboratory
- Blood gas (capillary or venous): assess pH, pCO2 (rising CO2 = impending failure)
- CBC if infection suspected
- BMP if metabolic cause suspected
- BNP if cardiac etiology considered
- Blood culture if sepsis concern
Imaging
- CXR: infiltrate, hyperinflation, pneumothorax, cardiomegaly, foreign body
- Lateral neck radiograph if concern for epiglottitis or retropharyngeal abscess (only if stable)
- CT angiography rarely needed (suspected pulmonary embolism, vascular ring)
Bedside
- POCUS: assess for pneumothorax, pleural effusion, pericardial effusion, B-lines (pulmonary edema), cardiac function
Management
Immediate Interventions
- Position of comfort
- Supplemental oxygen for SpO2 <90% (or <94% in neonates with known cardiac disease per local protocols)
- Bag-valve-mask ventilation if apneic or inadequate respirations
- Prepare for intubation (peds) / Neonatal RSI if impending respiratory failure
- Epinephrine IM if anaphylaxis suspected
- Needle decompression if tension pneumothorax suspected
Condition-Specific
- Croup: dexamethasone PO/IM, racemic epinephrine nebulized for moderate-severe
- Bronchiolitis: supportive care (suctioning, oxygen), high-flow nasal cannula if needed
- Asthma: albuterol, ipratropium, systemic corticosteroids; consider magnesium sulfate for severe
- Pneumonia: antibiotics based on age and severity
- Foreign body aspiration: if complete obstruction, follow BLS choking algorithm; bronchoscopy for partial obstruction
- Epiglottitis: minimize agitation, call anesthesia/ENT, OR for controlled intubation
- Pneumothorax: needle decompression followed by chest tube
Disposition
Admit / PICU
- Respiratory failure or impending respiratory failure
- Requiring supplemental oxygen beyond brief ED course
- Significant work of breathing not improving with treatment
- Toxic appearance or altered mental status
- Need for continuous monitoring or frequent treatments
- Suspected epiglottitis, retropharyngeal abscess, or other surgical airway emergency
Discharge
- Resolved symptoms after treatment (e.g., mild croup responding to steroids)
- Mild asthma exacerbation responding to bronchodilators with normal SpO2 on room air
- Reliable caregivers with clear return precautions
- Return precautions: increased work of breathing, poor feeding, color change, altered behavior, fever
