Pediatric Respiratory · Reference for Medical Students

🧒 Pediatric Respiratory Considerations Neonatal & Childhood Respiratory Disorders for Medical Students

1. Neonatal Respiratory Distress: Differential & Approach

Key Concept Respiratory distress in the newborn presents with tachypnea (>60/min), grunting, nasal flaring, retractions, and cyanosis.

ConditionTimingKey FeaturesImaging
Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS)Immediate (preterm)Surfactant deficiency; ground‑glass opacities, air bronchograms, low lung volumesDiffuse granular/ground‑glass
Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn (TTN)First few hoursDelayed clearance of fetal lung fluid; term infants, C‑section, resolves <48hProminent perihilar markings, fluid in fissures
Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS)Immediate (term/post‑term)Meconium‑stained amniotic fluid, hyperinflation, patchy infiltrates, pneumothorax riskCoarse irregular opacities, hyperinflation
Congenital PneumoniaVariableGBS, E. coli, Listeria; may present with sepsisPatchy infiltrates, effusions
Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia (CDH)ImmediateScaphoid abdomen, bowel sounds in chest, respiratory distress at birthBowel loops in chest, mediastinal shift

Neonatal RDS (Hyaline Membrane Disease)

Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (BPD)

2. Pediatric Upper Airway Emergencies

Croup (Laryngotracheobronchitis)

Epiglottitis

Foreign Body Aspiration

💡 Croup vs. Epiglottitis: Croup = viral, gradual, barking cough, steeple sign. Epiglottitis = bacterial, abrupt, toxic, drooling, thumbprint sign.

3. Pediatric Lower Airway Diseases

Bronchiolitis

Pediatric Asthma

4. Cystic Fibrosis (CF)

Genetics & Pathophysiology

Clinical Manifestations

SystemManifestations
RespiratoryChronic cough, purulent sputum, recurrent pneumonia/bronchitis, bronchiectasis (upper lobe predominant), nasal polyps, chronic sinusitis
GastrointestinalMeconium ileus (newborn), pancreatic insufficiency (malabsorption, steatorrhea, failure to thrive), distal intestinal obstruction syndrome (DIOS), biliary cirrhosis
EndocrineCF‑related diabetes (CFRD)
ReproductiveMale infertility (congenital bilateral absence of vas deferens), reduced fertility in females
OtherClubbing, salt loss (hyponatremic dehydration), hypertrophic osteoarthropathy

Diagnosis

Respiratory Microbiology in CF

Management

5. Congenital Lung Malformations

LesionKey FeaturesManagement
Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation (CPAM)
(formerly CCAM)
Hamartomatous lung tissue; usually single lobe. May cause respiratory distress or recurrent infection.Surgical resection (risk of infection, malignancy)
Bronchopulmonary SequestrationNon‑functioning lung tissue with systemic arterial supply (from aorta). Intralobar vs. extralobar.Surgical resection or embolization of feeding vessel
Congenital Lobar EmphysemaHyperinflation of one lobe (usually LUL) due to bronchial cartilage deficiency; air trapping.Observation if mild; lobectomy if severe distress
Bronchogenic CystForegut duplication cyst; may compress airway or become infected.Surgical excision

6. Pediatric Pneumonia: Age‑Specific Pathogens

Age GroupMost Common PathogensEmpiric Therapy
Neonates (<1 month)GBS, E. coli, Listeria, CMVAmpicillin + Gentamicin (or Cefotaxime)
1‑3 monthsAfebrile: Chlamydia trachomatis (afebrile, staccato cough), RSV. Febrile: S. pneumoniae, H. flu, S. aureus.Afebrile: Azithromycin. Febrile: Ampicillin or Ceftriaxone.
3 months – 5 yearsViruses (RSV, parainfluenza, influenza), S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae type B (if unvaccinated)Amoxicillin (outpatient); Ceftriaxone (inpatient)
>5 yearsMycoplasma pneumoniae, S. pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniaeAzithromycin or Amoxicillin

7. Pediatric vs. Adult Anatomical & Physiological Differences

8. Acute Respiratory Failure in Children

9. Quick Reference: Pediatric Respiratory Pearls

Upper Airway

  • Croup = dexamethasone +/− racemic epinephrine
  • Epiglottitis = secure airway, do NOT examine
  • Foreign body = rigid bronchoscopy

Lower Airway

  • Bronchiolitis = supportive, no bronchodilators/steroids
  • Asthma = ICS, SABA as needed
  • CF = CFTR modulators, airway clearance, PERT
💡 CF Respiratory Bugs (chronological): Staph aureus → Pseudomonas → Burkholderia. "Staph Prevails Before."

🧒 Pediatric Respiratory Reference · High‑yield for medical students, pediatrics rotations, and board exams.
Covers neonatal RDS, BPD, croup, epiglottitis, bronchiolitis, foreign body aspiration, cystic fibrosis, and congenital malformations.