What to Expect the Toddler Years (215 page)

BOOK: What to Expect the Toddler Years
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For severe diarrhea. Oral rehydration therapy only (although breast milk is okay) for 24 to 48 hours, followed by a bland diet, unless there is vomiting (see below). Start with easy-to-digest, low-fat, low-sugar complex carbohydrate foods, such as bananas, fruit (apple, pear) sauces, rice, plain pasta, potatoes, cereal, and toast. Small amounts of bland protein foods (chicken, cottage cheese) are also appropriate as soon as your child finds them palatable. Gradually return your child to a normal diet over the next couple of days.

For diarrhea with vomiting. Solid food should be withheld until vomiting has stopped. Diluted juices and oral rehydration preparations (in liquid or ice-pop form) are vital, however, to replace lost fluids. Giving fluids a few sips at a time reduces the chance that they will provoke more vomiting. (If vomiting doesn’t cease after 24 hours, call the doctor back.)

Prevention.
Treatment of any underlying condition causing the diarrhea; avoidance or limitation, when possible, of the foods, beverages, and medications that trigger diarrhea; meticulous adherence to food safety rules (see page 527); thorough hand washing by all family members after bathroom use or after changing diapers. Feeding yogurt containing live cultures during antibiotic therapy may also prove helpful—unless, of course, your toddler is allergic to or intolerant of milk.

When to call the doctor.
If your toddler shows signs of dehydration (see page 606). Call
immediately
if there is severe dehydration; acute diarrhea or the fever or vomiting accompanying the diarrhea lasts longer than 24 hours; your child refuses fluids; stools are bloody or the vomited material is greenish, bloody, or looks like coffee grounds; the abdomen is bloated or swollen or there is severe abdominal pain; there is a rash or jaundice (yellowing of the skin). In such cases, the doctor may want to examine your toddler’s stool or send it to the lab, so save a specimen in a plastic bag.

E
AR INFECTION

see Otitis Media (page 607)

I
NFLUENZA (FLU)

Symptoms.
Sudden onset of headache and fever (often with chills and shaking), fatigue, general achiness, and a dry cough. As the illness progresses, cold-like symptoms (sore throat, nasal congestion) may develop and the cough intensify. There may also be gastrointestinal symptoms (abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting) and “pinkeye,” or conjunctivitis (an inflammation of the membrane covering the eye). Sometimes, the flu may be difficult to distinguish from a cold, and sometimes there are no symptoms but fever and fatigue. After several days of flu, some children have calf pain that interferes with walking. Occasionally the influenza virus causes croup or pneumonia.

Season.
In the northern hemisphere, most often, December through March, with a peak in February. In the southern hemisphere, May through September. And in the tropics, all year round.

Cause.
Influenza viruses A and B, which occur in epidemic form and of which there are innumerable variations, and virus C.

SIGNS OF DEHYDRATION

Children who are losing fluids through diarrhea and/or vomiting may become dehydrated and require prompt treatment with oral rehydration therapy (see page 605). Call the doctor if you note the following in a child who is vomiting, has diarrhea, fever, or has otherwise been ill:

Dry mucous membranes (cracked lips).

Tearless crying.

Decreased urination. If your child is in diapers, fewer than 6 wet diapers in 24 hours or diapers that stay dry for 2 or 3 hours, should alert you to the possibility that urinary output is abnormally scant. If your child uses the toilet, this possibility might be signaled by the child using the potty less often and/or by urine that is darker or more yellow than usual or seems to contain crystals (but be sure what you’re seeing isn’t the gel from a super-absorbent diaper).

A sunken fontanel—the “soft spot” on the top of the head, which may still be open if your toddler is younger than eighteen months old, appears depressed.

A faster than usual heart rate (see page 574).

Listlessness.

Additional signs appear as dehydration progresses. These require
immediate
medical treatment. Do not delay in calling the doctor or getting your child to an emergency room if you note any of the following symptoms. While waiting to reach the doctor or en route to the emergency room, feed your toddler oral rehydration solution if possible.

Coolness and mottling of the skin of the hands and feet.

Reduced skin elasticity/wrinkling of skin.

Decreased capillary refill time. Blanch the skin of your child’s abdomen or the tip of a finger or toe by pinching and then releasing it; if it takes 2 to 3 seconds or more for normal color to return to the pinched area, there is dehydration. (Note, however, that this will only work in a warm room; in a cool room, the color of even a healthy child may take longer to return to normal.)

Sunken eyes.

No daytime urination for 4 hours or more.

Extreme fussiness or sleepiness; present only sometimes.

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