Welcome RSV
Welcome RSV
Welcome RSV
Question 1
It is January and you are seeing a healthy 2 week old child for
a well visit. His 3 year old sister currently has a cold. You
consider that the sister might have RSV and discuss the
possibility that the infant may contract the illness. Which one
of the following is true concerning the presentation of RSV in
infants?
a. Infants with RSV rarely have significant cough; vomiting
and apneic episodes are the predominate symptoms.
b. Infants with RSV often present with vomiting and diarrhea
long before developing URI symptoms.
c. Sudden onset of central apnea is an indication for RSV
testing in young infants.
d. RSV infection is often asymptomatic in full term newborns.
Answer 1
It is January and you are seeing a healthy 2 week old child for
a well visit. His 3 year old sister currently has a cold. You
consider that the sister might have RSV and discuss the
possibility that the infant may contract the illness. Which one
of the following is true concerning the presentation of RSV in
infants?
a. Infants with RSV rarely have significant cough; vomiting
and apneic episodes are the predominate symptoms.
b. Infants with RSV often present with vomiting and diarrhea
long before developing URI symptoms.
c. Sudden onset of central apnea is an indication for
RSV testing in young infants.
d. RSV infection is often asymptomatic in full term newborns.
Presentation
Common cold symptoms: cough, fever, and rhinorrhea, however
in infancy, 1/3 of cases spread to lower respiratory tract
In infants: peribronchiolar infiltrate of lymphocytes, proliferation
of bronchiolar epithelium, and small airway obstruction due to
mucus and sloughed epithelial cells. The small airway
obstruction can lead to air trapping and atelectasis with
subsequent V/Q mismatch and hypoxemia, with relatively little
smooth muscle constriction. The result is a clinical presentation
called bronchiolitis.
Lung exam can consist of rhonchi, wheezing, and crackles or
lungs may be clear but patient exhibits increased WOB, cough,
and tachypnea
Lung exam changes FREQUENTLY; wheezing one minute,
rhonchi the next
http://www.youtube.com/wa
tch?v=lIE_UElOk3c&feature
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_
=related
9ZiUZcmpy8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=URfbrnMJZE&feature=related
Diagnosis
Not ALL bronchiolitis is RSV and not all RSV is bronchiolitis Bronchiolitis can
also be caused by parainfluenza, influenza, and human metapneumovirus.
Diagnosis is CLINICAL
Chest x-ray is NOT required for diagnosis and is NOT necessary for
diagnosis, but if obtained, chest x-ray may reveal hyperinflation,
peribronchial thickening, and increased interstitial markings. Atelectasis in
the right upper or middle lobe is common and may appear as consolidation.
Laboratory confirmation of RSV is most commonly accomplished by rapid
diagnostic assays, which test a nasopharyngeal washing and use either
indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) testing or enzyme immunoassay (EIA).
The sensitivity of the rapid antigen test is in the 80% to 90% range.
Specificity estimates have been reported to be 77%-100% for both IFA and
EIA.
PCR offers high sensitivity and specificity but is limited by expense,
laboratory variation, and prolonged shedding in some children that cause
the test to be positive up to four weeks after acute infection.
Question 2
You have just admitted a 3 month old child with a 4 day history of
rhinorrhea, three days fever, and two days of increasing cough. On
exam he has a temperature of 38.2C and a respiratory rate of 50,
and a SaO2 of 91% on room air. He has moderate intercostal and
subcostal retractions and diffuse wheezing. The emergency room
staff gave acetaminophen to the child and two 2.5 mg Albuterol
nebulized treatments, spaced 20 minutes apart, with no change in
exam or oxygenation clearly documented. What is the BEST plan?
a. Place the child on continuous nebulized
b. Give the child oxygen and IV fluids only and discontinue
Albuterol
c. Increase the amount of Albuterol to 5.0 mg and give by
nebulizer every four hours
d. Give the child 1 mg/kg of Solumedrol and oxygen and
discontinue Albuterol
Answer 2
You have just admitted a 3 month old child with a 4 day history of
rhinorrhea, three days fever, and two days of increasing cough. On
exam he has a temperature of 38.2C and a respiratory rate of 50,
and a SaO2 of 91% on room air. He has moderate intercostal and
subcostal retractions and diffuse wheezing. The emergency room
staff gave acetaminophen to the child and two 2.5 mg Albuterol
nebulized treatments, spaced 20 minutes apart, with no change in
exam or oxygenation clearly documented. What is the BEST plan?
a. Place the child on continuous nebulized
b. Give the child oxygen and IV fluids only and discontinue
Albuterol
c. Increase the amount of Albuterol to 5.0 mg and give by
nebulizer every four hours
d. Give the child 1 mg/kg of Solumedrol and oxygen and
discontinue Albuterol
Treatment
Supportive Care!
Oxygen (NC or HFNC), IV fluids (NPO
if tachypneic)
Suctioningalthough there is not
good evidence for deep suctioning
Other Treatments
Bronchodilators-A Cochrane review did show some benefit in average
clinical score of wheezing, but no overall improvement in
oxygenation, hospitalization rate, or hospitalization duration was
seen.
Usual practice at CNMC-try albuterol, if doesnt help, do not continue
Higher risk population?
Other treatments
Steroids-Not currently recommended
(very mixed results from several
studies); may be indicated in more
severe illness
Chest PT-no good evidence to
support for bronchiolitis
Antibiotics-serious bacterial infection
is rare with bronchiolitis (<3%)
Question 3
Synagis (palivizumab) is recommended for all the
following children EXCEPT
a. A 19 month old ex-28 week preemie using
nighttime oxygen
b. A 4 month old child with a hemodynamically
insignificant ventricular septal defect
c. A 7 month old ex-27 week preemie with no
oxygen requirement
d. A 2 month old 34 week preemie born in August
who required intubation for 2 days, is currently in
day care, and has 3 and 7 year old siblings
Synagis
lessens RSV disease severity but
does not prevent RSV infection
Aimed at those that RSV hits hardest
premature, CLD, congenital heart
disease
Why cant we give it to everyone?
each injection costs well over $1000