Bronchiolitis



Bronchiolitis


Suzanne Schuh



Introduction



  • Viral infection of the lower respiratory tract, usually from November to April


  • Usually in children < 2 years of age


  • Bronchiolitis, viral induced reactive airways disease, and the first episode of asthma are clinically indistinguishable


  • Children with atopy or family history of atopy or severe bronchiolitis requiring hospitalization have increased probability of developing asthma


Clinical Presentation



  • Characterized by preceding coryza and cough, followed by respiratory distress


  • Respiratory distress is associated with tachypnea, chest retractions, and expiratory wheezing


  • Fever may or may not be present and crepitations are often heard


  • Severe bronchiolitis: may see grunting, nasal flaring, and poor air entry


  • Associated agitation, lethargy, pallor, cyanosis, apnea accompany impending respiratory failure


Practice Points: Diagnosis



  • Wheezing may be absent, especially at initial presentation


  • Wheezing may appear after a trial of inhaled bronchodilators


  • Although persistent absence of wheezing should prompt consideration of other diagnoses, it does not rule out bronchiolitis


  • Wheezing in bronchiolitis is often a low-pitched, rhonchi-like quality


Red flags suggesting an alternate diagnosis:



  • Toxic appearance (sepsis, bacterial infection)


  • Preexisting chronic feeding problems


  • Poor weight gain


  • Chronic respiratory symptoms (congestive heart failure, congenital lung anomaly, cystic fibrosis, chronic aspiration)


History



  • Antecedent coryza and worsening cough


  • Cough may be severe and at times paroxysmal and suggest pertussis


  • Occasional vomiting after cough is common


  • Bronchiolitis vs pertussis:









    Bronchiolitis:


    Respiratory distress is usually present between coughing episodes


    Pertussis:


    Usually no respiratory distress between coughing



  • Decreased oral intake is common, even in mild bronchiolitis


  • Symptoms usually abate in 2-3 weeks, rarely last 3-4 weeks or longer


  • High-risk history that may be associated with more severe disease or need for hospitalization: age < 6-8 weeks, prematurity, neonatal ventilation, coexistent chronic lung disease, hemodynamically significant heart disease, neuromuscular disease, immunodeficiency


Examination

Jun 22, 2016 | Posted by in EMERGENCY MEDICINE | Comments Off on Bronchiolitis

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