Assessment of febrile child
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Transcript Assessment of febrile child
Assessment of
Febrile child
Ravi Seyan
F2F encounter
Consider ABC
• A- airways
• B- Breathing
• C- Circulation
F2F
• Airway, breathing: signs of respiratory
distress include recession, grunting,
accessory muscle use, flared nostrils
F2F
Normal Respiration
• Neonates : 30 to 60 breaths/ min
• Infant
: 20 to 40 breaths /min
20 to 30 breaths/ min
• 1 to 3 years :
• 4 to 10 years: 15 to 25 breaths/ min
15 to 20 breaths/ min
• Over 10 years:
BE CONCERNED IF RR> 70 IN UNDER 1 YEAR
OR > 50 IN OLDER CHILDREN
PS rates are not reliable in crying infant
F2F
• Capillary refill time after five seconds'
pressure on a finger or the sternum should
be two seconds. Blotchy, cold peripheral
skin suggests circulatory failure
Green – low risk
Amber – intermediate risk
Red – high risk
Colour
Normal colour of skin, lips
and tongue
Pallor reported by parent/carer
Pale/mottled/ashen/blue
Activity
Responds normally to social
cues
Content/smiles
Stays awake or awakens
quickly
Strong normal cry/not crying
Not responding normally to social
cues
Wakes only with prolonged
stimulation
Decreased activity
No smile
No response to social cues
Appears ill to a healthcare
professional
Unable to rouse or if roused does
not stay awake
Weak, high-pitched or continuous
cry
Nasal flaring
Tachypnoea:
•RR > 50 breaths/minute
age 6–12 months
•RR > 40 breaths /minute
age > 12 months
Oxygen saturation ≤ 95%
in air
Crackles
Grunting
Tachypnoea:
•RR > 60 breaths/minute
Moderate or severe chest indrawing
Respiratory
Hydration
Normal skin and eyes
Moist mucous membranes
Dry mucous membrane
Poor feeding in infants
CRT ≥ 3 seconds
Reduced urine output
Reduced skin turgor
Other
None of the amber or red
symptoms or signs
Fever for ≥ 5 days
Age 0–3 months, temperature
≥ 38°C
Age 3–6 months, temperature
≥ 39°C
Swelling of a limb or joint
Non-weight bearing/not using an
extremity
Non-blanching rash
Bulging fontanelle
Neck stiffness
Status epilepticus
Focal neurological signs
Red Alert
signs
•High temperature, fever, possibly with cold hands and feet
•Vomiting, or refusing feeds
•High pitched moaning, whimpering cry
•Blank, staring expression
•Pale, blotchy complexion
•Baby may be floppy, may dislike being handled, be fretful
•Difficult to wake or lethargic
•The fontanelle (soft spot on babies heads) may be tense or bulging.