| Literature DB >> 32432064 |
Konstantinos Douros1, Mark L Everard2.
Abstract
The diagnosis and management of infants and children with a significant viral lower respiratory tract illness remains the subject of much debate and little progress. Over the decades various terms for such illnesses have been in and fallen out of fashion or have evolved to mean different things to different clinicians. Terms such as "bronchiolitis," "reactive airways disease," "viral wheeze," and many more are used to describe the same condition and the same term is frequently used to describe illnesses caused by completely different dominant pathologies. This lack of clarity is due, in large part, to a failure to understand the basic underlying inflammatory and associated processes and, in part, due to the lack of a simple test to identify a condition such as asthma. Moreover, there is a lack of insight into the fact that the same pathology can produce different clinical signs at different ages. The consequence is that terminology and fashions in treatment have tended to go around in circles. As was noted almost 60 years ago, amongst pre-school children with a viral LRTI and airways obstruction there are those with a "viral bronchitis" and those with asthma. In the former group, a neutrophil dominated inflammation response is responsible for the airways' obstruction whilst amongst asthmatics much of the obstruction is attributable to bronchoconstriction. The airways obstruction in the former group is predominantly caused by airways secretions and to some extent mucosal oedema (a "snotty lung"). These patients benefit from good supportive care including supplemental oxygen if required (though those with a pre-existing bacterial bronchitis will also benefit from antibiotics). For those with a viral exacerbation of asthma, characterized by bronchoconstriction combined with impaired b-agonist responsiveness, standard management of an exacerbation of asthma (including the use of steroids to re-establish bronchodilator responsiveness) represents optimal treatment. The difficulty is identifying which group a particular patient falls into. A proposed simplified approach to the nomenclature used to categorize virus associated LRTIs is presented based on an understanding of the underlying pathological processes and how these contribute to the physical signs.Entities:
Keywords: diagnostic feature; infant; lower respiratory tract infection; neutrophil; pre-school age children; viral; wheeze
Year: 2020 PMID: 32432064 PMCID: PMC7214804 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2020.00218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Plethora of terms to describe acute lower respiratory tract infections experienced by infants and young children.
| Viral lower respiratory tract infection |
| Acute viral bronchitis |
| Viral tracheitis |
| Group |
| Acute bronchiolitis |
| Viral pneumonia |
| Viral pneumonitis |
| Recurrent bronchiolitis |
| Wheezy bronchitis |
| Viral wheeze |
| Pre-school wheeze |
| Wheeze associated viral episode (WAVE) |
| Toddler wheeze |
| Happy wheezer |
| Recurrent wheeze |
| Pre-school asthma |
| Reactive airways disease (RAD) |
| Viral induced exacerbation of asthma |
| Transient wheeze |
| Transient asthma |
| Multi trigger wheeze |
| Exacerbation of persistent bacterial bronchitis |
Figure 1A typical cytospin preparation of a bronchoalveolar specimen obtained from an infant with respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis illustrating the intense neutrophilic response typical of symptomatic respiratory viral infections.
Figure 2Impact of age and disease on clinical signs. An intense neutrophilic response to a respiratory virus can lead to significant airflow limitation. This typically causes widespread crackles predominantly in younger infants [GpA] and wheeze in older infants and preschool children [GpB]. The same clinical picture can be seen in an asthmatic preschool child with a viral exacerbation of asthma [GpC]. The incidence of children in GpA falls through the pre-school years while the prevalence of asthma increases from late infancy such that most children with a viral respiratory infection, airflow obstruction and wheeze at 15 months will be in GpB while the majority of those with the same clinical picture at 6 years of age will be in GpC.
Figure 3Factors that may contribute to airflow obstruction in an infant or pre-school child following acquisition of a respiratory virus. Adventitial respiratory sounds may or may not be present. Exacerbations of asthma and PBB require specific therapy, the majority of episodes require good supportive care appropriate to the severity of symptoms.