Stridor (peds): Difference between revisions

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==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Pediatric stridor DDX}}
{{Pediatric stridor DDX}}
===[[Stridor (Peds)|Pediatric stridor]]===
===<6mo===
*Laryngotracheomalacia
*Vocal cord paralysis (weak cry)
*Subglottic stenosis (previous intubation)
*Airway hemangioma (usually regresses by age 5)
*Vascular ring/sling
====>6mo====
*[[Croup]]
*[[Epiglottitis]]
*[[Bacterial tracheitis]]
*[[Foreign body]] (sudden onset, asymmetric)
*[[Retropharyngeal abscess]] (muffled voice, fever)


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 13:09, 22 September 2015

Differential Diagnosis

Pediatric stridor

<6 Months Old

  • Laryngotracheomalacia
    • Accounts for 60%
    • Usually exacerbated by viral URI
    • Diagnosed with flexible fiberoptic laryngoscopy
  • Vocal cord paralysis
    • Stridor associated with feeding problems, hoarse voice, weak and/or changing cry
    • May have cyanosis or apnea if bilateral (less common)
  • Subglottic stenosis
    • Congenital vs secondary to prolonged intubation in premies
  • Airway hemangioma
    • Usually regresses by age 5
    • Associated with skin hemangiomas in beard distribution
  • Vascular ring/sling

>6 Months Old

  • Croup
    • viral laryngotracheobronchitis
    • 6 mo - 3 yr, peaks at 2 yrs
    • Most severe on 3rd-4th day of illness
    • Steeple sign not reliable- diagnose clinically
  • Epiglottitis
    • H flu type B
      • Have higher suspicion in unvaccinated children
    • Rapid onset sore throat, fever, drooling
    • Difficult airway- call anesthesia/ ENT early
  • Bacterial tracheitis
    • Rare but causes life-threatening obstruction
    • Symptoms of croup + toxic-appearing = bacterial tracheitis
  • Foreign body (sudden onset)
    • Marked variation in quality or pattern of stridor
  • Retropharyngeal abscess
    • Fever, neck pain, dysphagia, muffled voice, drooling, neck stiffness/torticollis/extension

See also

References