Overlooking the Obvious during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Dyspnoea with Asymmetric Breath Sounds in a Toddler
Autor: | Paula Rautiainen, Sari Pyörälä, Johanna Hästbacka, Heli Salmi, Heini Harve-Rytsälä |
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Přispěvatelé: | HUS Children and Adolescents, Children's Hospital, University of Helsinki, Helsinki University Hospital Area, HUS Emergency Medicine and Services, Lastenkirurgian yksikkö |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Evening Case Report Pediatrics Asymptomatic RJ1-570 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Bronchoscopy 3123 Gynaecology and paediatrics 030225 pediatrics Health care Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Toddler Respiratory distress medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry COVID-19 General Medicine medicine.disease 3. Good health Pneumonia Emergency medicine medicine.symptom Foreign body business |
Zdroj: | Case reports in pediatrics, 2021:8855962 Case Reports in Pediatrics Case Reports in Pediatrics, Vol 2021 (2021) |
ISSN: | 2090-6811 2090-6803 |
Popis: | Background. Paediatric healthcare specialists are concerned about the secondary effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on children. We report a case of acute respiratory distress in a healthy toddler whose healthcare providers were sidetracked from the correct diagnosis by suspicion of COVID-19. Case Presentation. The patient was a 20-month-old healthy boy. In the morning, he had coughed while drinking milk. He was asymptomatic for the day but presented with acute respiratory distress when lying down in the evening. An ambulance was called, and he was taken to a tertiary hospital’s paediatric emergency department, where his condition and oxygen saturation fluctuated. He had mildly elevated temperature and petechiae on his trunk, showed asymmetrical radiographic and auscultatory pulmonary findings, and did not tolerate any exertion. Pneumonia was suspected, SARS-CoV-2 was considered as potential causative agent, and the child was admitted to a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit. As the patient did not show clear signs of infection or bronchial obstruction, the events were thoroughly rediscussed with the caregiver next morning. It was then found out that the child had also been eating cashew nuts. Multiple pieces of cashew nuts were removed from the left bronchial tree in a bronchoscopy. After the procedure, all symptoms promptly resolved. Foreign body aspiration—an obvious cause of acute respiratory distress in our patient’s age group—was overlooked by experienced emergency medical care providers and paediatric critical care physicians due to the slightly unusual presentation, incomplete anamnestic information, and a bias to consider COVID-19 in the current exceptional circumstances. Conclusions. Emergency care providers are instructed to consider all patients with respiratory distress as potential COVID-19 patients. However, the clinical course of COVID-19 infection is usually mild in children. Therefore, alternative causes for serious breathing difficulty are more likely, and all differential diagnoses should be considered in the usual unbiased manner. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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