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UPPER RESPIRATORY INFECTION CHILDREN DR. DAVID TRISH G1 2017 UPPER RESPIRATORY TRACT IFECTIONS • • • • Common cold Pharyngitis Sinusitis Laryngitis and laryngotracheitis • The most common cause of cough in children is represented by airways respiratory infection, mostly concerning the upper airway and of viral origin (URTI). THE COMMON COLD • • • Short, mild and usually self-limiting illness. Children may have up to12 colds per year. There are over 200 virus that can cause the common cold • Rhinoviruses cause approximately 30-50% of colds in adults. They grow optimally at temperatures near 32.8°C (91°F), which is the temperature inside the human nares. • Coronaviruses are a significant cause of colds. However, exact case numbers are difficult to determine, because unlike rhinoviruses, coronaviruses are difficult to culture in the laboratory. • Enteroviruses, including coxsackieviruses, echoviruses, and others, are also leading causes of common colds. • Adenoviruses, orthomyxoviruses (including influenza A and B viruses), paramyxoviruses (eg, parainfluenza [PIV]), RSV and EBV account for many URIs. Varicella, rubella, and rubeola infections may manifest as a nasopharyngitis before other classic signs and symptoms CLINICAL FEATURES OF COMMON COLD: • Rhinorrhea, sore throat,cough,fever and malaise lasting up to 7 days and often lingering mucopurlant nasal discharge. • In infants cold may manifest as irritability, snuffles and difficulty with feeding. • Infants under 3 months of a age are susceptible to LRTI. TREATMENT OF COMMON COLD Echinacea, humidified air, nasal decongestants, vitamin C and zinc have reported some positive results but there insufficient data to recommend any of these for treatment. CONSIDER: DRUG • • • • • • Analgesic drug Paracetamol Indication Temporary relief of pain. Reduces fever >38. Precautions- Renal or hepatic dysfunction. Accidental paracetamol hepatotoxicity Dyspepsia, nausea, allergic and haematological reactions. Overdose can result in severe liver damage, renal tubular necrosis. NSAID Ibuprofen Indication Temporary relief of pain. Reduces fever >38. Short term use only. Precautions- prolonged use, history of GI bleeding, Decongestant Oxymetazoline Hydrochloride Nasal and middle ear congestion Antibiotics Phenoxymethylpenicillin Oral therapy for mild to moderate infections due to penicillin sensitive organisms – Sore throat THE NASAL CAVITY Presenting symptoms • Pain and tenderness over sinuses • Headache • Mucopurulent nasal discharge (>7-10 days) • Stuffy nose • Facial pressure SYMPTOMS OF SINUSITIS • Symptoms specific for frontal sinus infection • Tender forehead • Symptoms specific for maxillary sinus infection • Aching upper jaw • Aching teeth • Tender cheeks • Symptoms specific for ethmoid sinus infection • Swollen eyelids • Swelling around eyes • Pain between eyes • Tenderness of sides of nose • Loss of smell • Stuffy nose • Symptoms specific for sphenoid sinus infection • Earaches • Neck pain • Aching top of head COMPLICATION SINUSITIS • Orbital complications : preseptal cellulitis, orbital cellulitis, subperiosteal abscess, orbital abscess, and cavernous sinus thrombosis (dural thrombophlebitis). • Intracranial complications : meningitis, subdural empyema, epidural abscess and cerebral abscess may all complicate acute and chronic sinusitis Meningitis • • • • • • • Fever and chills Severe headache Nausea and vomiting Stiff neck (meningismus) Sensitivity to light (photophobia) Mental status changes Bony complications :Osteomyelitis (and osteitis) are usually related to acute frontal sinusitis INVESTIGATING SINUSITIS • Physical examation • X-ray of sinuses • CAT scan of sinuses • Nasal swab test TREATMENT OF SINUSITIS ACUTE SORE THROAT PRESENTING WITH AN ACUTE SORE THROAT ACUTE PHARYNGITIS: PHYSICAL EXAM • Viral: edema and hyperemia of tonsils and pharyngeal mucosa • Streptococcal: exudate and hemorrhage involving tonsils and pharyngeal walls • Epstein-Barr virus (infectious mono): may also cause exudate, with nasopharyngeal lymphoid hyperplasia • Adenoviruses: exudate may sometimes be present • Herpes simplex virus and some coxsackie A infections: vesiculation and mucosal ulceration may be present • Diphtheria: fibrous pseudomembrane with necrotic epithelium and leukocytes Ƅ BACTERIAL INFECTION: GROUP A BETA-HEMOLYTIC STREPTOCOCCUS • MOST COMMON AND IMPORTANT • COMMONLY PRESENTS IN CHILDREN AGED 5–6 • FEVER, DRY SORE THROAT, CERVICAL ADENOPATHY, DYSPHAGIA, AND ODYNOPHAGIA • THE TONSILS AND PHARYNGEAL MUCOSA ARE ERYTHEMATOUS AND MAY BE COVERED WITH PURULENT EXUDATE • THE TONGUE MAY ALSO BECOME RED ("STRAWBERRY TONGUE") • SEQUELAE: ACUTE RHEUMATIC FEVER AND POSTSTREPTOCOCCAL GLOMERULONEPHRITIS STREPTOCOCCUS INFECTION CAUSING INFLAMMATION OF THE THROAT AND TONSILS. • TREATMENT ACUTE PHRYNGITIS Penicillin V 250 mg/dose OF for children and 500mg/dose for adolescents and adults. • Amoxicillin; 750 mg once daily for10 days or 50 mg/kg/day for 6 days divided bid. • A single IM injection of benzathine penicillin (600,000U for children < 27 kg; 1,2 million U for larger children and adults. • Erythromycin 40 mg/kg in divided doses for 10 days. • Azithromycin offers convenience of once-daily administration and shorter length of therapy. • Cephalosporins appear to be as, good as or better than penicillin, perhaps because these drugs are more effective in eradicating streptococcal carriage. Evidence is not sufficient to recommend shorter courses of cephalosporins for routine therapy at this time Pappas and Henley: Nelson textbook of pediatrics, 2007 CANDIDA COXSACKIE VIRUS: • HERPANGINA ULCERATIVE VESICLES OVER THE TONSILS, POSTERIOR PHARYNX, AND PALATE • COMMONLY OCCURS IN CHILDREN UNDER THE AGE OF 16 • GENERALIZED SYMPTOMS OF HEADACHE, HIGH FEVER, EBV • Diagnosis • • • • By Clinical presentation CBC with differential (atypical lymphocytes –T lymphocytes) Detection of heterophil antibodies (Monospot test) IgM titers EBV PETECHIAE INFLAMED PHARYNX AND TONSILS MARKED BY A GRAYISH PSEUDOMEMBRANE FORMED BY THE BACTERIA ARE CHARACTERISTIC SIGNS OF DIPHTHERIA. MISCELLANEOUS CAUSES OF PHARYNGITIS • Primary HIV infection • Gonococcal infection • Diphtheria • Yersinia entercolitica (can have fulminant course) • Mycoplasma pneumoniae • Chlamydia pneumoniae