The Wheezing Infant: Airway Problems in Children
The Wheezing Infant: Airway Problems in Children
The Wheezing Infant: Airway Problems in Children
Wheeze is a symptom and not a diagnosis. It is extremely common in infancy; 2030% of children have experienced recurrent
episodic wheezing by the age of 12 months. Wheezing may result
from widespread peripheral airway narrowing or, less commonly,
from localized central disease. Excluding recurrent viral wheezing
and asthma-like symptoms, all other specific causes of wheezing
(e.g. cystic fibrosis, congenital airway disorders, chronic lung
disease of prematurity) affect only 23% of the population.
Although wheezing disease preceded by acute viral bronchiolitis
early in infancy features prominently in most articles on childhood
asthma, it affects, at most, 1% of the population. The increased
prevalence of reported wheezing in industrialized countries until
the mid-1990s, accompanied by an increase in the number of
hospital admissions for wheezing, represents a true increase in
the problem rather than simply increased awareness. In the UK,
wheezing in pre-school children accounts for about 25% of acute
hospital admissions in childhood, and almost 50% during epidemics of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection.
Risk factors
There are major differences in the risk factors for wheezing in
infants and for asthma in schoolchildren (Figure 1), which indicate
that wheezing in infancy has a different basis.
In infant wheezing, exposure to environmental tobacco smoke
during fetal life and postnatally is strongly implicated.
Atopy does not seem to be a predisposing factor in wheezy
infants in the community, but it may be implicated in children
who are admitted to hospital with more severe disease. Research
on cohorts of infants show that there is no simple relationship
between aero-allergen exposure and sensitization. Nevertheless,
atopic asthma is uncommon in the first year of life.
In infants with recurrent wheezing, bronchial responsiveness
is no different from that in healthy controls (in contrast with the
situation later in life).
Brief or no breast-feeding during the first few weeks of life
increases the risk of wheezing in infancy, possibly because of
reduced protection against viruses. The effect is small, however,
and does not extend to later atopic asthma.
Clinical features
It is important to determine the duration, pattern and severity of
wheeze, and to identify provoking factors. The pattern (particularly whether symptoms occur between acute viral episodes) is
important in management. There are two main patterns.
Acute episodic wheeze and cough are commonly associated with respiratory viral infection and punctuated by mainly
symptom-free intervals. Rhinoviruses, RSV, coronaviruses and the
recently identified metapneumovirus are commonly implicated.
Pathology
Little is known about the histopathology and immunopathology of
wheezing in infants. Acute viral bronchiolitis in the first 6 months
of life is an inflammatory disorder characterized by a massive influx
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Wheezing in
infants
Asthma in
schoolchildren
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Investigations
Chest radiography should be performed on the first presentation of any infant with acute severe airway obstruction requiring secondary care (see below). Subsequent episodes should be
investigated only if there are unusual features.
If the differential diagnosis is unclear, high-resolution CT can
exclude structural disorders such as airway compression).
Bronchoscopy may be performed when focal stricture or a
foreign body is suspected, and microlarynoscopy when an upper
airway anomaly is possible. Bronchography is rarely needed, to
detect tracheal and large airway abnormalities such as tracheobronchomalacia).
A sweat test should be performed when cystic fibrosis is
suspected.
Immunological investigations are seldom helpful. A host
defence defect may present with wheezing, but is more likely to
be associated with recurrent febrile episodes, suppurative lung
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Management
Avoidance of trigger factors: cigarette smoke is probably the most
important avoidable factor. Viral infections are seldom avoidable,
but attendance at day nurseries and overcrowding in the presence
of older siblings increases the risk of viral infections in infancy.
Breast-feeding reduces the risk of wheeze. Reduction of aeroallergen sources (e.g. house dust mite) and not keeping furry
pets in the home may be worthwhile if there is a strong family or
personal history of atopy, but paradoxically may increase allergen sensitization in children in low-risk families. Reducing aeroallergen exposure has no effect on viral wheeze. There is little
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Despite the absence of good clinical data, published management schemes and protocols for infants resemble those used for
older children. However, much closer control is required over
infant therapy, because acute episodes can progress with alarming rapidity and the parents of young infants generally have little
experience on which to base clinical judgements.
Domiciliary therapy for day-to-day chronic symptoms mild
symptoms that do not disturb sleep or feeding may not require
therapy. In patients with troublesome chronic symptoms, a stepwise approach to treatment should be considered, starting with
intermittent inhaled bronchodilator and progressing through lowdose inhaled corticosteroid to high-dose inhaled corticosteroid
and, if necessary, oral prednisolone on alternate days as for older
children. There is no evidence to support the use of sodium cromoglycate in infants. In infants with very troublesome, persistent
airway obstruction, alternative diagnoses should be excluded. Any
infant who requires any form of corticosteroid therapy should be
managed jointly by a primary care physician and an expert in
paediatric pulmonary disease.
Acute episodes management of infants with episodes of acute
severe airway obstruction is summarized in Figure 4. A trial of
bronchodilators and corticosteroids is worthwhile (despite limited
evidence of benefit in clinical trials), except in those with acute
bronchiolitis (first episode of wheeze in an infant < 6 months
old), in whom neither is useful (though preliminary evidence
suggests that nebulized adrenaline may be useful, as in rescue
therapy in a hospital setting). If used, bronchodilators (2-agonist or
antimuscarinic agent) should be administered by an oxygen-driven
jet nebulizer and face-mask, using a standard childhood dose.
Infants should be assessed by oximetry and clinical observation
1530 minutes later and the treatment modified if necessary. Heart
rate monitoring is important, because bronchodilator therapy may
lead to tachycardia. A repeat dose should be used only if there is
clear evidence of efficacy.
Oxygen therapy may be required in infants with an SaO2 by
pulse oximetry of less than 92% during quiet sleep or the quiet
awake state. Intravenous therapy or nasogastric feeding should be
considered in children who are too breathless to drink; however,
a nasogastric tube may increase airway obstruction and trigger
coughing by irritating the pharynx. Hyponatraemia secondary to
inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion is a rare complication
of severe acute bronchiolitis (and infantile pneumonia). Monitoring
of body weight and serum sodium concentration is required.
Mechanical ventilation may be needed if exhaustion or a gradual
increase in oxygen requirement occurs. PaCO2 is seldom used as a
single indicator of the need for ventilatory support in infants.
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Prognosis
Symptoms are generally confined to the pre-school years, particularly in children with simple episodic wheeze associated with
viral infections. Recent data suggest that the long-term outcome
in these infants is good; after 25 years, they have only slightly
more symptoms than a control population. Acute episodic viral
wheeze in infancy appears to be almost completely independent of
later atopic childhood asthma. Hospital-based cohorts of wheezy
infants differ from the general population; a slight excess of atopy
is seen. Prognosis is worse in these children and in those who
suffer more than four attacks of wheezing in their pre-school years.
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Mild
Moderate
Severe
High-dependency unit
Management as in childrens ward
Arterial blood gas if childs condition is
deteriorating
Special nursing
Improvement
Deterioration
Deterioration
Childrens ward
Assessment
Clinical examination
Oximetry
Heart rate monitor
Treatment
Trial of bronchodilators continue if effective
Corticosteroid therapy, 12 mg/kg/day p.o. for
3 days or i.v.
Oxygen if SaO2 < 92%
Intravenous fluids if child will not drink
Paediatric ICU
Mechanical ventilation
Home
Written treatment plan
Corticosteroid course to be completed
Bronchodilator (if effective)
Follow-up
46 weeks later in paediatric clinic
including focal damage to large airways (e.g. granuloma, strictures), bronchiectasis (generalized or localized), and abnormalities of growth and development that may lead to focal hypoplasia
(McLeods or SwyerJames syndrome).
Mortality from acute wheezing disease in infancy is low. Most
deaths in acute episodes occur in infants compromised by congenital heart disease or underlying pulmonary disorders such as
cystic fibrosis or chronic lung disease of prematurity.
Prognosis may also be worse in infants with a very low birth weight
(< 1500 g) and in those in whom there is evidence of eosinophil
activation (raised serum eosinophil cationic protein production or
urinary eosinophil protein-X excretion) during acute episodes.
Adolescents and young adults with a history of wheezing lower
respiratory illness in the first 2 years of life are prone to productive
cough and to a slight reduction in lung function. Recently, a link
has been shown between chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
in late adult life and lower respiratory illness in infancy; disturbance of lung development during fetal life may be the important
common factor.
There is no reason to believe that infants who begin wheezing
with acute viral bronchiolitis will fare differently from others with
acute episodic wheeze. RSV bronchiolitis does not damage the
lungs in the long term, though other viruses (particularly certain
adenoviral subtypes) may do so, leading to chronic obliterative
bronchiolitis. Other chronic post-viral syndromes are described
following acute severe viral pneumonia or bronchiolitis in infancy,
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FURTHER READING
Silverman M, Grigg J, McKean M. Virus-induced wheeze in young
children: a separate disease? In: Johnston S L, Papadopoulos N G.
Respiratory infections in allergy and asthma. New York : Dekker,
2003.
Silverman M, Wilson N M. Wheezing disorders in infants and young
children. In: Silverman M, ed. Childhood asthma and other wheezing
disorders. London: Chapman & Hall, 1995.
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