See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Skills may be enhanced with education and practice at a simulation center.
- Resuscitation, Pediatric
CODES
ICD9
- 768.5 Severe birth asphyxia
- 768.6 Mild or moderate birth asphyxia
- 768.9 Unspecified severity of birth asphyxia in liveborn infant
ICD10
P84 Other problems with newborn
RESUSCITATION, PEDIATRIC
Brian Clyne
•
Seth Gemme
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
Emergent treatment of pediatric patients with imminent or ongoing respiratory or circulatory failure
ETIOLOGY
- Respiratory failure
- Early shock (compensated)
- Late shock (uncompensated)
- Cardiopulmonary arrest
- Respiratory and/or circulatory failure leads to tissue hypoxia, acidosis, and cell death.
- Multisystem organ failure subsequently develops.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- History from caregivers/parents of onset, progression, inciting, contributing, or predisposing trauma/exposure/conditions, associated findings, past medical history, family history, medications, ingestions
- History of preceding events from pre-hospital personnel
- Respiratory failure:
- Tachypnea
- Slow, irregular breathing pattern prearrest
- Decreased or absent breath sounds; inadequate ventilation
- Retractions, accessory muscle use, expiratory grunting, nasal flaring
- Mottled skin, cyanosis
- Altered level of consciousness: Irritability, agitation, lethargy, weak or absent cry, decreased response to pain
- Weak or absent cough or gag reflex
- Most common presenting condition
- Early shock (compensated):
- Vital signs initially compensated
- Orthostatic changes or isolated tachycardia
- Slightly delayed cap refill (>2 sec)
- Warm, dry skin in early septic shock
- Late shock (uncompensated):
- Tachycardia, tachypnea, prearrest bradycardia
- Hypotension, weak peripheral pulses
- Mottled, pale, cool extremities with markedly decreased capillary refill
- Poor muscle tone
- Decreased urine output progressing to anuria
- Decreased LOC, seizures, coma
- Fever or hypothermia in septic shock
- Cardiopulmonary arrest:
- Final common pathway of progressive deterioration of respiratory and circulatory function
Physical-Exam
- Airway assessment:
- Look, listen, feel for air movement, breath sounds, and chest movement. Observe for stridor or signs of obstruction.
- Breathing assessment:
- Respiratory rate: Tachypnea or slow/irregular pattern (more ominous)
- Respiratory effort: Note grunting, nasal flaring, head bobbing, retractions, stridor.
- Pulse oximetry reflects hemoglobin oxygen saturation, not necessarily oxygen delivery.
- Auscultation: Assess for wheezing, rales, diminished breath sounds.
- Circulatory assessment:
- Pulse: Tachycardia or bradycardia (more ominous); orthostatic changes noted easily.
- BP: Typical SBP in children is 90mm Hg plus twice the age (yrs). Hypotension is a late finding; widened pulse pressure in early septic shock.
- Peripheral pulse presence and strength (correlates better than BP)
- Capillary refill: Delayed >2 sec with poor perfusion
- Skin: Mottled, pale, or cyanotic
- Mental status assessment:
- Decreased responsiveness, irritability, confusion, agitation, poor muscle tone, sluggish pupillary response, posturing.
- Complete set of vital signs including rectal temperature, oximetry, and orthostatics when appropriate
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- ABCDE evaluation:
- Airway: Assess ability to speak/cry; assess for air movement. Assess for stridor or trauma.
- Breathing: Observe for nasal flaring, grunting, head bobbing, retractions, tracheal deviation, chest injury or pneumothorax; auscultate, apply oxygen.
- Circulation: Evaluate for pulses, capillary refill, mottling, cyanosis.
- Disability: Determine mental status with alert/verbal/painful/unresponsive (AVPU) scale or Glasgow Coma Scale. Assess for neurologic deficits; check stat glucose.
- Exposure/environment: Fully expose for skeletal survey. Prevent hypothermia.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Workup directed by history, assessment of (ABCs), and differential diagnosis
- Arterial blood gas with oximetry to assess oxygenation, ventilation, acid–base status
- Glucose, electrolytes
- Other metabolic/toxicology tests as indicated
- Sepsis evaluation including lumbar puncture, urine and blood cultures as indicated
Imaging
- CXR to evaluate pulmonary or cardiac sources
- Lateral decubitus, inspiratory/expiratory film, or laryngoscopy/bronchoscopy if foreign body (FB) suspected
- ECG
- Echocardiogram
- Cervical spine, other trauma films as indicated
- CT brain for trauma or abnormal neuro exam
- US as indicated
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Respiratory:
- Upper airway obstruction: Croup, epiglottitis, peritonsillar or retropharyngeal abscess, FB, tracheitis, congenital abnormalities
- Lower airway obstruction: Asthma, pneumonia, bronchiolitis, FB, cystic fibrosis
- Thoracic trauma, near drowning
- Hypovolemia: Trauma/hemorrhage, diarrhea/vomiting, burns
- Cardiovascular: Congenital/acquired heart disease, myocarditis, pericarditis, CHF, dysrhythmias
- Infectious: Sepsis, meningitis, gastroenteritis, peritonitis, pyelonephritis
- CNS: Status epilepticus, epidural/subdural hematoma
- Metabolic: DKA, hypoglycemia, hypernatremia, hypo/hyperkalemia, acidosis
- Toxicologic: CO poisoning, cardiotoxic agents
- Near sudden infant death syndrome/apparent life-threatening event
- Consider child abuse when history is inconsistent with the illness or pattern of injury.
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Stabilize ABCs; monitor.
- Avoid prolonged on-scene times
- Gather pertinent history from family/bystanders
- Recognize respiratory or circulatory failure; intervene early.
- Recognize impending arrest; support ABCs
- Automated external defibrillator for ventricular fibrillation (VF) and pulseless ventricular tachycardia (VT) in children ≥1 yr.
- Early ED notification to allow preparation
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Early recognition and stabilization of shock
- Glucose, IV, oxygen, cardiac monitoring
- Diagnose and treat immediate life-threats
- Employ Broselow Pediatric Emergency Tape for appropriate drug doses and equipment.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Airway:
- Secure 1st in every resuscitation.
- Employ head tilt/chin lift or modified jaw thrust (if trauma suspected).
- Clear secretions and blood with suction.
- Temporary stabilization with oral or nasal airway, bag-valve mask assistance
- Intubation as necessary using appropriate tube size ([16 + age in years]/4) or size similar to patient’s little finger or nares
- Rapid-sequence intubation:
- Preoxygenate
- Pretreatment: Atropine to prevent bradycardia, lidocaine if head injury
- Induction agents: Midazolam, thiopental, etomidate (avoid in septic shock), ketamine
- Paralytics: Rocuronium, vecuronium, pancuronium, succinylcholine
- Position of endotracheal tube (ETT) at lips (cm) = 3 times diameter of tube (mm)
- Postintubation: Confirm placement with continuous end-tidal CO
2
monitoring
- Breathing:
- Oxygenate with supplemental O
2
, nonrebreather mask; assist ventilation with bag-valve mask or control ventilation if intubation performed.
- Treat conditions that limit ability to oxygenate/ventilate: Pneumothorax, hemothorax, cardiac tamponade, circumferential burns.
- Circulation:
- Obtain IV, intraosseous (IO), or central access
- Resuscitate with 0.9% NS or LR bolus at 20 mL/kg; repeat if necessary
- Control obvious bleeding sources: Apply direct pressure; elevate.
- Consider transfusion of packed RBCs after crystalloid replacement in trauma.
- Use pressors early; peripheral use OK
- Dopamine preferred 1st line; if refractory, norepinephrine (warm shock) or epinephrine (cold shock)
- Cardiopulmonary resuscitation:
- Provide blood flow to vital organs while restoring spontaneous circulation
- Infant <1 yr: Check brachial/femoral pulse
- Child 1–8 yr: Check carotid pulse
- Cardiac dysrhythmias:
- Often due to respiratory/metabolic process
- Treat dysrhythmias per PALS algorithms.
- Unstable tachydysrhythmias may require adenosine, amiodarone, procainamide, cardioversion, or defibrillation.
- Unstable bradydysrhythmias may require atropine, epinephrine, or pacing.
- Pulseless rhythms: VF, pulseless VT, pulseless electrical activity, asystole may require defibrillation, epinephrine, amiodarone, lidocaine.