DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Breathing difficulties
- Audible stridor (worsens with feeds, crying, and on lying supine)
- Muffled
hoarseness
“Hot potato” voice in adults
- Feeding difficulties in infants (amount of feeds and regurgitation with GERD)
- Apneas and cyanotic attacks
- Antenatal, perinatal, and birth events (e.g.. resuscitation at birth with intubation)
- Anxiety
- Cough
- Drooling
- Sore throat
Physical-Exam
- Tachypnea
- Dyspnea
- Dysphagia
- Fever
- Respiratory distress, worse with agitation
- Nasal flaring, intercostal retractions, subcostal indrawing
- Paradoxic diaphragmatic movement (late finding)
- Audible stridor (inspiratory/biphasic stridor)
- Cyanosis
- Trismus:
- Peritonsillar abscess, retropharyngeal abscess, Ludwig angina
ESSENTIAL CONSIDERATIONS
- Visualization of the upper airway:
- Radiographic if symptoms very mild; be careful!
- Direct visualization in OR with a surgeon prepared to perform a cricothyrotomy or tracheostomy is the safest approach.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
These tests are not helpful and thus avoidable; may upset a child even more.
Imaging
Radiograph of lateral and posteroanterior neck and chest:
- Not essential
- Only done in extremely mild cases or when there is suspicion of foreign body aspiration
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Fiberoptic laryngoscopy:
- Should be performed with an intubating fiberoptic laryngoscope in a setting where a rapid surgical airway can be obtained
- Direct laryngoscopy:
- Diagnostic study of choice
- Should be performed in a setting where a rapid surgical airway can be obtained
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Stertor:
- Pharyngeal obstruction while wheezing
- Bronchospasm
- Malingering (patient breathing against a closed glottis)
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Keep child calm, with mother if possible.
- Supply blow-by oxygen.
- Maintain adequate airway.
- Use bag-valve-mask (BVM) if respiratory status deteriorates.
- Intubate if BVM ineffective.
- Provide rapid transport with ED notification.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- In children: Avoid agitation. Supply blow-by oxygen.
- Use 100% nonrebreathing-type face mask
- Pulse oximetry to check oxygen saturation and monitoring of vitals.
Pediatric Considerations
- Avoid agitating child.
- Watch for rapid deterioration of respiratory status.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Airway management:
- Stridor comprises a difficult airway passage:
- Be prepared to create an airway surgically before intubation.
- If time permits, perform intubation in OR with surgeon and pediatric anesthesiologist present.
- Intubate with tube 1 or 2 sizes smaller than would be normally used.
- Oral awake intubation:
- Ketamine induction
- Patient is sedated but continues to ventilate during procedure.
- Avoid blind nasotracheal intubation.
- Oral intubation is preferred initially. After oral intubation the oral tube is replaced by a nasal tube of the same size.
- Provide surgical airway if intubation fails or sudden deterioration in respiratory status occurs.
- Postintubation ceftriaxone in cases of infectious cause
- Sedation/paralysis for duration of intubated status after airway is secured.
- Extubation could be attempted when an air leak develops around the tracheal tube, which can take around 2–10 days.
- Controversies:
- Heliox therapy
- Racemic epinephrine therapy
- Early intubation
MEDICATION
- Atropine: 0.02 mg/kg IV
- Ceftriaxone: 1–2 g IV
- Diazepam: 2–10 mg IV (peds: 0.2–0.3 mg/kg)
- Etomidate: 0.3 mg/kg IV
- Fentanyl: 3 μg/kg IV
- Ketamine: 1–2 mg/kg IV or 4–7 mg/kg IM
- Lidocaine: 1.5 mg/kg IV
- Midazolam: 1–5 mg IV (0.07–0.3 mg/kg for induction)
- Vecuronium: 0.1 mg/kg IV
- Nebulized epinephrine: 1 mL of 1:1,000 diluted to 5 mL with normal saline
- Dexamethasone: 0.15 mg/kg oral/IV
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
All cases of stridor that are not completely resolved during the ED course mandate admission of patient to hospital.
Discharge Criteria
Stridor fully resolved or identified as a nonstridorous abnormal breathing sound.
Issues for Referral
Consultation with an otolaryngologist or a pediatric surgeon prior to airway visualization
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Attempting visualization of the airway without the backup needed for an emergency tracheostomy is a pitfall.
- Laryngoscopy findings determine the indications for other complementary exams such as barium swallow, polysomnography, echocardiography, CT, or magnetic resonance scans of neck and thorax.
- Patients, especially children with stridor, often have associated abnormalities involving respiratory tract which mandates not only endoscopic exam of the larynx, but also the tracheobronchial system.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Boudewyns A, Claes J, Van de Heyning P. Clinical practice: An approach to stridor in infants and children.
Eur J Pediatr.
2010;169(2):135–141.
- Daniel M, Cheng A. Neonatal stridor.
Int J Pediatr
. 2012;2012:859104.
- Halpin LJ, Anderson CL, Corriette N. Stridor in children.
BMJ.
2010;340:c2193.
- Mellis C. Respiratory noises: How useful are they clinically?
Pediatr Clin North Am
. 2009;56(1):1–17, ix.
- Walaschek C, Forster J, Echternach M. Vocal cord dysfunction without end?
Klin Padiatr
. 2010;222(2):84–85.
CODES
ICD9
- 748.2 Web of larynx
- 748.3 Other anomalies of larynx, trachea, and bronchus
- 786.1 Stridor
ICD10
- Q31.0 Web of larynx
- Q31.5 Congenital laryngomalacia
- R06.1 Stridor
SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE
Alfred A. Joshua
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Bleeding into the subarachnoid space and CSF:
- Spontaneous:
- Most often results from cerebral aneurysm rupture
- Aneurysms that occur are more likely to rupture (>25 mm).
- Traumatic:
- Represents severe head injury
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence is 6–16 per 100,000 individuals.
- Affects 21,000 in US annually
- Associated mortality in 30–50% of patients
- Uncommon prior to 3rd decade; incidence peaks in 6th decade
RISK FACTORS
- Previous ruptured aneurysm who have other aneurysms
- Family history
- Hypertension
- Smoking
- Alcohol abuse
- Sympathomimetic drugs:
- Cocaine, methamphetamine, and ecstasy (MDMA) use
- Gender (female:male 1.6:1)
Genetics
- 3–7-fold increased risk with 1st-degree relatives with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)
- Strongest genetic association represents only 2% of SAH patients:
- Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, Ehlers–Danlos type IV, familial intracranial aneurysms