Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Bronchitis
- mixture of wheeze & coarse crackles
- different to chronic bronchitis of adults
- main sx in children
- cough
- persists about 2 weeks
- lasts > 2 weeks
- pertussis
- Mycoplasma infections
- fever
- No evidence of speeding recovery
- Abx
- Cough suppressants
- Expectorants
- Whooping cough (pertussis)
- highly contagious resp infection
- causative pathogen
- Bordetella pertussis
- epidemics
- every 3-4 mths
- Clinical features
- initially coryza
- 1 week
- ff by
- characteristic paroxysmal or spasmodic cough
- followed by
- characteristic inspiratory whoop (paroxysmal phase)
- may be absent in infants
- apnoea a key feature in infants
- spasms worse @ night
- often -> vomiting
- vigorous coughing often followed by
- epistaxis & subconjunctival haemorrhages
- during a paroxysm
- child goes red or blue in face
- mucus flows from nose & mouth
- paroxysmal phase
- 3-6 weeks duration
- convalescent phase
- sx gradually decrease
- but may persist for many months
- complications
- uncommon
- pneumonia
- convulsions
- bronchiectasis
- mortality
- significant
- esp in infants
- those who haven't completed primary vaccination @ 4mths esp vulnerable
- Mx
- infants & young children
- severe spasms of cough or cyanotic attacks
- admit to hospital
- isolate from other children
- Ix
- culture of org on per-nasal swab
- blood count
- characteristic lymphocytosis (> 15 x 10^9)
- Rx
- Abx
- erythromycin
- decreases sx only if started during catarrhal phase
- prophylaxis for close contacts
- vaccination of unvaccinated infant contacts
- reduces risk of developing pertussis
- reduces severity of disease in those affected
- doesn't guarantee protection