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Sneezes and Wheezes
Childhood Respiratory Illnesses
By Donna Smith
Year round, hospital emergency rooms are filled with children suffering from respiratory tract infections. Many of these illnesses can be treated successfully at home, but it's important for parents to know when to seek more aggressive treatments. When is a cold just a cold – or something more?
"[The common cold] is caused by a variety of viruses in the rhinovirus family," says Dr. Stuart Abramson, assistant professor of pediatric immunology at Baylor College of Medicine and staff physician at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston, Texas. The symptoms, which can be one or all, include stuffy nose, runny nose, sneezing and cough.
Dr. Abramson says that in young infants, overmedicating should be avoided. "Sometimes just a bulb suctioning of the mucus to help open up the airway, so that [they] can breathe" is effective, he says. For older children, decongestants are often prescribed, such as Sudafed or topical sprays like Neosynephrine. "Those are short-term treatments for just a few days," says Dr. Abramson. "Sometimes just washing the nose with saline – an over-the-counter saline spray – can be helpful."
"The recommendation is that these patients should get an antibody injection that prevents RSV," he says. Synagis (palivizumab) is the medication that has been approved for preventing serious complications from RSV in high-risk infants.
The symptoms of RSV start by mimicking a cold, but then lead to increased coughing, difficulty breathing and lethargy. RSV can lead to pneumonia and cause other complications requiring hospitalization. "If the symptoms are severe and they have poor oxygenation from the pneumonia, that can be a complication," says Dr. Abramson.
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