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Pediatrics 1
Mar 23rd, 2009 by RH-111
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Pediatric Assessment, Dr Cooper

3/23/09

See www.cpem.org

  • Planning: Triage & transport – Needs vs. resources – enroute, review and plan
  • Arrival: General Impression: Pediatric Assessment Triangle (PAT) – Hands off assessment – ABC Appearance, Work of Breathing, Circulation to skin
  • Initial Assessment: Rapid cardiopulmonary assessment – Hands on
  • Focused History: pertinent negatives, relevant findings

Pediatric Assessment Triangle

  1. Appearance
  • Alertness
  • Distractibility
  • Consolibility
  • Eye contact
  • Quality of cry
  • Spontaneous movement
  • (All critical to whether brain is perfused properly)

     

  1. Work of Breathing
  • Chest rise
  • Rocking motions
  • Retractions
  • Nasal flailing
  • Head bobbing
  • Grunting
  • Snoring
  • Stridor

(C)Circulation

  • Pallor
  • Mottled
  • Blue
  • Grey

 

Initial Assessment: Rapid cardiopulmonary assessment – Hands on

  • Airway –clear? Maintainable?, stable?
  • Breathing – ventilation, oxygenating, stable? In peds rates and effort are not necessarily related like adults, effort much more important!
  • Circulation: Shock? Cardiogenic?, stable? Shock: inability of blood to meet metabolic needs of the tissues- Mental status, pulse rate and character; distal vs. proximal, skin color, BP. Cardiogenic shock: Dysrhythmias, other , compensated, decompensated, cardiopulmonary failure (cardiogenic shock not initially treated with fluid)

Focused History: pertinent negatives, relevant findings

Why peds don’t have heart attacks: no CAD, atherosclerosis, etc –congenital heart diseases are rare. Adults drop dead, kids droop dead (secondary to respiratory arrest, etc)

 

Anatomic & Physiologic differences

Child airway – funnel shaped, narrowest part is at crichoid ring- adult s cylinder, narrowest at glottis

  • Small jaw, large tongue, prone t soft tissue obstruction – reposition
  • Immature immune system. lack of specific antibodies, protective mucus layer
  • Infants are nasal breathers, keep clear
  • Floppy omega shaped epiglottis
  • Narrow subglottic area

Remember if suspected C spine injury, stabilize c spine before/while maintaining airway

Breathing anatomy

  • Adult – diagonal ribs, stiff cartilage, stronger muscles
  • Ped – horizontal ribs, soft cartilage, weaker muscles – diaphragmatic breathers, much less alveoli – faster o2 depletion. Susceptible to barotraumas, high risk of Pneumothorax, bag until chest rise, no more. (head bobbing grunting – near end resp failure)young tissue – high elastin content– shift mediastinum -easily

Breathing assessment requires an open Airway! – ASSESS A, THEN FIX A! THEN GO ON TO B!

  • Is ventilation adequate – inspect chest rise – capability    
  • Auscultation – air entry
  • (Missed slide)

Always consider hypoxia first as cause for AMS

  • Auscultate in armpits, small chest, sounds travel
  • ETT only of BVM ineffective
  • Consider NG/OG if abdominal distention

Circulation

  • Adults, big hearts large chambers and thin walls, Starlings Law (like a spring, recoil helps CO)
  • peds – small chambers thick walls – can’t vary CO well with heart walls, CO depends only on HR
  • Adults – stiff vessels – vigorous response to hypovolemia and hypothermia
  • Peds – soft vessels – more compliant vessels
  • Smaller blood volume, lose lager percentage compared to adult
  • Smaller fat mass – larger relative blood volume

Bleeding control – direct pressure – retain systemic o2

Shock assessment – cause assessment – cardiogenic etc – Simultaneous palpation of central and peripheral pulses – strong central weak peripheral – compensated – everything weak; decompensated shock

  • Tachycardia = 150 – 5x age in year
  • Kids get mottled – not clammy
  • Cap refill – use warm extremities
  • Minimum systolic BP: 80 + 2x age

Adrenaline makes you stupid – use a Broselow Tape

Causes of AMS (AEIOU-TIPS)
Jan 25th, 2009 by RH-111
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  • Alcohol, ingested toxins
  • Epilepsy, endocrine, exocrine, electrolytes
  • Infection, insulin
  • Overdose, opiates, oxygen deprived (hypoxia, hypercarbia)
  • Uremia (renal failure)
  • Trauma, temperature
  • Insulin, infection
  • Psychosis, porphyria
  • Stroke, shock, space occupying lesions

Metabolic causes

  • Glycemic emergencies
  • hypoxia
  • hypercarbia
  • Thiamine deficiency
  • Acidosis
  • Electrolytes, incl. sodium, calcium, magnesium

Structural causes

  • stroke, thrombotic, embolic, hemorrhagic
  • Tumor or other space occupying lesions
  • Trauma, Brain edema

Drug related causes

  • alcohol
  • opiates
  • hallucinogens
  • etc.

Infections

  • Meningitis
  • Encephalitis
  • Sepsis

Endocrine causes

  • hypo/hyperthyroidism
  • Graves’s disease
  • Addison’s disease
  • Cushing’s disease
  • diabetic emergencies

Last but not least – Psychiatric causes

  • Psychosis
  • Conversion reactions
  • Catatonia
  • Munchausen’s Syndrome

Updated 11/18/09

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