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
Nontoxic appearance (fever may be high)
Absence of agitation/pathologic lethargy
Normal level of consciousness for time of day
Dehydration is rare despite decreased oral intake
Degree of tachypnea is highly variable: persistent RR ≥80 is usually associated with severe disease
Suprasternal and supraclavicular retractions may be difficult to see due to the short neckFull access? Get Clinical Tree