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WHEEZING (Other Than Asthma)
Symptom Definition
- A high-pitched
purring or whistling sound produced during breathing out.
- Rapid breathing rate is commonly associated (more than 60 breaths/minute
if less than 2 months, more than 50 if 2-12 months and more than 40 if 1-5 years).
- Use this guideline only if the child has never been treated
for asthma.
Cause
-
Main cause
in the first 2 years of life: bronchiolitis (peaks at 6-12 months). This
is a viral infection (RSV) of the small airways (bronchioles).
-
Main cause: after age 3, may be the first attack of asthma.
See More Appropriate Topic (instead of this one) If
WHEN TO CALL YOUR DOCTOR FOR WHEEZING
Call 911 Now (you may
need an ambulance) If:
- Wheezing started suddenly after medicine, an
allergic food or bee sting.
- Severe difficulty breathing (struggling for each breath, making
grunting noises with each breath, unable to speak or cry because of difficulty
breathing).
- Your child passed out or has bluish lips.
- Child recently choked on
small object or food.
Call Your Doctor Now (night or day) If
- Wheezing
but none of the symptoms described above.
HOME CARE ADVICE FOR MILD WHEEZING (If Your Doctor
Doesn't Need to See Your Child)
- Warm Fluids for Coughing Spasms: For
any bouts of severe coughing, offer warm apple juice or lemonade if older than
4 months old. (Reason: These can relax the airway and loosen up sticky
secretions). Do not give any cough medicine.
-
Suction for a blocked nose: If the nose is blocked up,
your child will not be able to drink from a bottle or breast-feed. Most
stuffy noses are blocked by dried or sticky mucus. Wash out the dried
secretions with warm water or saline nose drops. Use 1 drop at a time in infants. This will loosen up the sticky mucus. Then use a suction bulb. Repeat nosedrops until open. Make saline nosedrops by adding ½ tsp of
table salt to 1 cup (8 oz) of warm water.
-
Humidifier: If the air is dry in your home, run a humidifier.
-
Smaller Feedings: Encourage small, frequent feedings whenever
your child has the energy to drink. (Reason: child with wheezing doesn't
have enough energy for long feedings).
-
Avoid Tobacco Smoke: Active or passive smoking makes coughs
much worse.
-
Contagiousness: Your child can return to day care after
the wheezing and fever are gone.
- Call Your Doctor If:
- Breathing becomes difficult, tight or loud
- Wheezing becomes worse or your child develops
any of the "Call Your Doctor" symptoms
Disclaimer:
This information is not intended be a substitute for professional medical advice.
It is provided for educational purposes only. You assume full responsibility
for how you choose to use this information.
Pediatric HouseCalls Online. Copyright © 2000-2005
Barton Schmitt, M.D. FAAP
Reviewed 8/2005
Revised 7/2005
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