1 / 33

Croup

Croup. Objectives. Clarify the definition and epidemiology of croup List the potential etiologic agents Know the signs and symptoms Differentiate croup from other causes of inspiratory stridor and upper respiratory disease Understand the management of croup. Definitions.

sarah
Download Presentation

Croup

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Croup

  2. Objectives • Clarify the definition and epidemiology of croup • List the potential etiologic agents • Know the signs and symptoms • Differentiate croup from other causes of inspiratory stridor and upper respiratory disease • Understand the management of croup

  3. Definitions • Croup- term used to describe the clinical picture of laryngotracheitis. • Hoarse voice • Barking cough • Inspiratory stridor • Possible respiratory distress

  4. Epidemiology • Peak fall & winter. • Range primarily 1-6 years • Incidence 5/100 of children between age 1-2 years • Males > females

  5. Etiologies • Parainfluenza, types 1,2,3 • Contribute 65%-80% of cases. • Influenza A & B • Adenovirus • RSV • Rarely mycoplasma.

  6. Pathogenesis • Subglottic narrowing due to inflammation. • Cricoid ring allows fixed area for obstruction. • 1mm swelling causes 65% obstruction in infant.

  7. Pathogenesis • Atelectasis/mucus plugging • Ventilation/perfusion mismatch • Negative intrapleural pressure may lead to varying degrees of pulmonary edema. • Hypoxia/hypercarbia • Air hunger • Anxiety/Lethargy/Obtundation.

  8. Clinical history • Parents usually report viral URI symptoms 12-48hrs prior to cough. • Fever, “Barking cough,”Stridor • Typical course 3-5 days.

  9. Worry if • Drooling • Dyphagia • Toxic appearance • Stridor without cough or without fever • Incomplete immunizations

  10. Badness mimicking croup • Epiglottis • Dysphagia • Odynophagia • Drooling • Tripoding/sword-swallowing • Pt resists lying on back • Prefers leaning forward • Stat to OR for evaluation/intubation

  11. Badness Mimicking Croup, cont. • Bacterial tracheitis • More common in order children to teens • Staph aureus/Diphtheria • Fever/ resp distress/Dysphagia/Odynophagia • Worsening over hours • Difficult to distinguish from epiglottis • Doesn’t matter, management is same: • OR intubation • Abx, worry more about Staph coverage if child is older.

  12. Badness Mimicking Croup, cont. • Bacterial superinfection of Croup • Symptoms 5-7 days • Worsening quickly over hours • Increasingly high fevers • Toxic appearance

  13. Badness Mimicking Croup, cont. • Retropharyngeal/peritonsilar abscess • Fever • Odynophagia • Prodrome of sore throat • Often swollen, tender ant. cerv. Nodes. • Resistence to neck movement

  14. Badness Mimicking Croup, cont. • Neoplasm • Foreign body • Afebrile • Toddlers most at risk • Often no history of aspiration • Trauma • History/physical exam.

  15. Badness Mimicking Croup, cont. • Angioneurotic edema • Recurrent • Lip swelling • Spasmotic croup (well, not really badness) • Recurrent • Nighttime

  16. Laboratory tests • Little to no value…... • ABG to assess for respiratory acidosis – could worsen child’s symptoms by stressing them • May need IV access if in moderate to severe distress

  17. Radiographic findings • REMEMBER – CROUP IS A CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS!!! • Steeple sign on PA Film • Lateral neck films if unsure of ruling out retropharyngeal abscess • Fluouroscopy if still unsure

  18. Anatomy

  19. Anatomy on X-ray

  20. Red -dilated hypopharynx White - dilatation of the laryngeal ventricle Blue - narrowing of the sub-glottic trachea

  21. Steeple Sign

  22. What is this? Retropharyngeal Abscess!

  23. What is this? Epiglottis

  24. Management of Croup • Do I need an artificial airway!!!! • Cool mist • No literature to support efficacy • Multiple studies demonstrating that it may worsen situation (in moderate to severe croup) • Bronchospasm • Hypothermia in young infants • Tent obscures close observation of pt.

  25. Epinephrine • Mechanism- constricts arterioles to airway thus reducing further edema. • Waiisman, et al. Prospective RCT comparing L-epi and RE in treatment of laryngotracheitis. Pediatrics. 1992. • Demonstrated reduced croup score by 30min, lasts usually 2hrs. • Dose 0.5cc of 2.25% racemic solution • No difference found L- epi using 5cc of 1:1000 conc.

  26. Epi, cont. • Rebound phenomenon • Bunk… It just wears off in 2hours usually. • Multiple studies demonstrating safe to d/c pt from ER if: • Steroids were given, too. • No resting stridor 2-4 hrs after tx.

  27. Corticosteroids • Steroid controversy…. getting clearer. • Ausejo, M. Glucocorticoids for croup. Cochrane Database of Systemic Reviews Jan 2000. • Repeated with identical results by Moyer in Pediatrics, March 2000. • Metanalysis (N=2221 patients) • Improved Croup score at 6 and 12 hrs, not 24 after dexamethasone or budesonide neb. • Decr. need for epi nebs by 9%. • Decr. Emergency Room stay (-11hrs). • Decr. Hospital stay (-16hrs).

  28. Corticosteroids, cont. • Kairys, et al. Steroid treatment of laryngotracheitis. Pediatrics. 1989. • First meta-analysis of randomized trials. • Demonstrated reduction in intubation from 1.27% (no steroids) to 0.17% steroids. • No difference in inhaled budesonide versus IM dex.

  29. Corticosteroids, cont • Ritticher and Ledwith. Outpatient treatment of moderate croup with dexamethasone: Intramuscular versus oral dosing. Pediatrics. 2000 • ER patients sent home. • No statistical difference in later interventions. • Power to detect at least 10% difference.

  30. Corticosteroids, cont. • Klassen, et al. Nebulized budesonide and oral dexamethasone treatment for croup. JAMA. 1998 • Oral dexamethasone/Inhaled budesonide • Both treatments • No difference in groups • Budesonide much more expensive.

  31. Corticosteroids • A moment on dosage: • Most studies 0.6mg/kg (IM or PO) • Malhotra and Krilov. Viral Croup. PIR, 2001 • Lower doses of 0.15mg/kg and 0.3mg/kg shown to be equally effective.

  32. Heliox • Weber, JE. A randomized comparison of Heliox and racemic epinephrine for the treatment of moderate to severe croup. Pediatrics. 2001 • N=29 • Similar improvement in both groups. • No significant difference in croup score, oxygen sat, respiratory rate or heart rate.

  33. Where to now? • Still unanswered questions: • Should you re-dose dexamethasone since the duration is pharmacologically is 48hrs, but benefit was only demonstrated though 12hrs? • What about heliox and epi together? • Should any patient with croup symptoms be given steroids?

More Related