Croup
- Croup (laryngotracheitis) is a respiratory illness characterized by inspiratory stridor, barking cough, and hoarseness.
- typically occurs in children six months to three years of age and is caused by parainfluenza virus
Glucocorticoids
- Glucocorticoids provide long-lasting and effective treatment of mild, moderate, and severe croup
- The antiinflammatory actions of glucocorticoids are thought to decrease edema in the laryngeal mucosa of children with croup.
- Improvement is usually evident within six hours of administration but seldom is dramatic
Dexamethasone
- Dexamethasone may be administered IM, IV, or orally.
- no clinically significant difference in croup outcomes between IM or orally administered
- When dexamethasone is administered IM or IV, a single dose of 0.6 mg/kg(maximum dose of 10 mg) is used most frequently
Budesonide
- Nebulized budesonide has been shown to be more effective than placebo and as effective as IM or oral dexamethasone for the treatment of croup
- is more expensive and more difficult to administer than IM or oral dexamethasone and is not routinely indicated in the treatment of croup.
- may provide an alternative to IM or IV dexamethasone for children with vomiting or severe respiratory distress
- In children with severe respiratory distress, a single dose of budesonide may be mixed with epinephrine and administered simultaneously
Prednisolone
- Some authorities suggest that for children who are treated as outpatients, oral prednisolone (2 mg/kg per day for three days) is an alternative to oral dexamethasone
- A RCT compared oral dexamethasone (0.6 mg/kg on the first day followed by placebo on the next two days) with oralprednisolone (2 mg/kg per day for three days) in 87 children with mild or moderate croup who were treated as outpatients showed no differences between groups in additional health care visit
Nebulized Epinephrine
- nebulized epinephrine to patients with moderate to severe croup often results in rapid improvement of upper airway obstruction.
- Epinephrine constricts precapillary arterioles in the upper airway mucosa and decreases capillary hydrostatic pressure, leading to fluid resorption and improvement in airway edema
- Even a modest increase in airway diameter can lead to significant clinical improvement
- Racemic epinephrine is administered as 0.05 mL/kg per dose (maximum of 0.5 mL) of a 2.25 percent solution diluted to 3 mL total volume with normal saline. It is given via nebulizer over 15 minutes
- clinical effects of nebulized epinephrine last for no more than two hours.
References:
- www.uptodate.com
- Paediatric Protocol 3rd Edition
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.