Transcript Slide 1

Respiratory Problems in
the Newborn
Objectives
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Understand pathophysiology of common
respiratory conditions in the newborn
Management of these conditions
Update on resuscitation devices
Discuss case scenarios
Respiratory Problems in the Newborn
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Challenging problem
Requires early recognition and prompt
therapy
Associated with significant morbidity and
mortality
Introduction
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Most newborn babies are vigorous after
birth
About 10% require some assistance
Only 1% need resuscitative measures
(intubation, chest compressions, and/or
medications) to survive
NRP 2006
Signs of a Compromised Newborn
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Poor muscle tone
Depressed respiratory
drive
Low HR
Low BP
Tachypnea
Cyanosis, nasal flaring,
grunting, SCR and ICR
NRP 2006
Fetal Physiology
In the fetus
 Alveoli filled with
lung fluid
 Lungs expand with
air after birth
NRP 2006
Tachypnea vs Respiratory Distress
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Normal respiratory rate: 40-60 per minute
Tachypnea: RR>60 in a quiet resting baby
Distress: RR>or <60 with retractions,
grunting, central cyanosis, lethargy and poor
feeding
Common Respiratory Problems in the
Newborn
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TTN
RDS
MAS
Infection (e.g.pneumonia, sepsis)
PPHN
Nonpulmonary Conditions with RD
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Anemia
Asphyxia
Heart Disease
Malformations
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Metabolic conditions
Maternal drug abuse
Pneumothorax
History
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Gestation: Term or Preterm
Consistency of the amniotic fluid: Clear or
meconium stained
Risk factors for infection: PPROM,
chorioamnionitis, HSV lesions
Physical Examination
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Respiratory Rate –intermittent apnea and
tachypnea and with distress
Cyanosis – place pulse ox
Retractions, Flaring, Grunting, Stridor
Auscultation - decreased aeration (RDS),
distant heart sounds (Pneumothorax)
Physical Examination
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Cleft palate and micrognathia – aspiration,
upper airway obstruction
Scaphoid abdomen and worsening with
bag mask ventilation - CDH
Excessive frothing/secretions - TEF
Worsening condition at rest and improves
with crying - Choanal atresia
Common causes of RD in Preterms
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Most common cause : Respiratory Distress
Syndrome (RDS)
Asphyxia
Pneumonia
Hypoglycemia
Hypothermia
NRP 2006
Respiratory Distress Syndrome
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Classic presentation:
-grunting
-retractions
-flaring
-cyanosis
-tachypnea
CXR: mild granularity to ground-glass
appearance
Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Initial Management
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Check laryngoscope and ET tubes
Suction and CO2 detector
Pre-warmed radiant warmer, (Polyethlene
bag/Saran wrap)
Suction mouth and nose
Perform tactile stimulation
Attach pulse oximeter to right upper
extremity (preductal saturations)
Flow-Inflating Bag
T-Piece Resuscitators
Self- Inflating Bag
Positive Pressure Support
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CPAP (4-5 cm H20),
FiO2 (sats 85-93% in preterm and 90-98% in
term infants)
HR<100, apnea/gasping or with cyanosis,
give 40-60 breaths per minute
Adequate chest movement (start PIP at 20
cm H20 then increase to achieve chest rise)
Apnea
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Commonly seen in preterm infants
Due to immature control of breathing
Other causes: hypoglycemia, anemia,
infection, hypoxemia
Consider load with caffeine
May need CPAP or HFNC
Rarely need intubation and mechanical
ventilation
Diagnostic Work-up
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Chest X-ray
Sepsis work-up - CBC/blood culture
Consider lumbar puncture as clinically
indicated
Begin antibiotics
Management
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Respiratory therapy PPV/oxyhood/HFNC/NCPAP/intubation
Transfer to a higher center when necessary
Monitor all babies HR/RR/perfusion/BP/Urine
output/hydration
NPO with OG to gravity
IV fluids; D10W 60ml/kg/d for term infants
and 80ml/kg/d for preterm infants
Case # 1
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35yo mother, good prenatal care, serologies
appropriate, admitted in labor, clear fluid
39w, male infant, 3.8kg
Tachypneic with mild SCR, intermittent
grunting
Saturation: 88-92% on RA
CXR, ABG,CBC, Blood culture sent,
antibiotics started
What is the diagnosis?
Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn
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Delayed clearance of lung fluid
CXR: perihilar linear densities
Monitor respiratory status closely
Most do not require any respiratory support
May need HFNC or CPAP
Case #2
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You are asked to attend a delivery
32yo, G5P4, 38w, good prenatal care,
serologies appropriate, admitted in labor,
ROM with meconium stained fluid
Baby born SVD, floppy, pale
What do you do?
After above steps, infant noted to have
spontaneous breathing with SCR, ICR,
grunting
Case # 2 continued
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Place pulse ox: sats 81%
Increased WOB with decreasing saturations
What is the cause?
Meconium Aspiration Syndrome
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Meconium causes mechanical obstruction
Non vigorous: intubate and suction
Supportive respiratory therapy: CPAP/HFNC
UAC/UVC placement
NPO
Antibiotics
Sedation as indicated
Monitor closely
Case #3
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17y mother, presents in labor, G1P0, 40w
Good prenatal care
Serologies appropriate
GBS negative
Present with fever 101, mild abdominal
tenderness
Infant born apneic, responds to resuscitation
SCR, ICR, flaring and grunting
What could be the likely cause?
Infection/Neonatal Pneumonia
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Prolonged rupture of membranes,
chorioamnionitis
May present with RD, lethargy, poor feeding
CXR, CBC, blood culture, LP
CXR: similar to RDS with haziness all over
Antibiotics – Ampicillin and gentamicin as
per neofax
Pneumonia
Case # 4
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27yo mother, presented to OB clinic with
spotting
Admitted to hospital, NRFHT
Crash C-section under GA
41w, G1P0, O negative mother, GBS negative
Born floppy, responds to inititial resus
Admitted to term nursery
Respiratory distress with SCR, desaturations
Hypotensive, acidotic
PPHN
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Severe cyanosis, respiratory distress
Preductal>postductal saturations
Respiratory support with FIO2 as needed to
maintain saturation above 95%
May be primary or associated with other
causes: MAS, pneumonia
Echocardiogram: elevated RV pressure
Begin antibiotics
Surgical Causes
Examination of the neck, nose, mouth and throat
Pneumothorax
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Can occur spontaneously
Presentation: respiratory distress
Decreased breath sounds on affected side
Small, less symptomatic, clinically stableconservative management –follow CXR
May conider 100% oxygen for nitrogen washout
More sick: may need emergent needling or
chest tube placement
Needle Thoracentesis
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22 gauge angiocatheter, or 23 gauge
butterfly needle, 3-way stopcock, 10-20 ml
syringe
Rapid improvement in respiratory distress
and saturations and overall clinical
appearance
Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia
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Herniation of abdominal contents into the
chest
AVOID bag and mask ventilation/CPAP
Intubate in delivery room and inform
surgery immediately
Arrange transport to a tertiary center