Childhood atopic asthma (cough, wheezing, breathlessness) is all too common
Stigma attached is doubly so, myths associated with inhalers and spacers is strongly ingrained, perpetuated acquiesced even by a proportion of paediatricians
What happens in asthma?
Due to a viral or environmental trigger (pollen etc) the child develops reaction in his airways: smaller breathing tubes (bronchioles)in lungs constrict (muscle around them tighten) + smooth lining of these tubes become swollen and produce sticky mucus
What are the symptoms of #asthma in a child?
Tightness of chest, fast breathing, shortness of breath, severe fatigue with cough when severe
Milder symptoms could be troublesome cough in sleep, on running around or a cough that follows common cold and doesn’t get better easily
How is asthma diagnosed?
Diagnosis is by a good history, examination and sometimes tests : history reveals pattern, examination tells us if there is wheeze (squeaky noises on listening to chest) In older kids we do lung function tests to quantify/monitor response to treatment
What are the common concerns?
Oh! He will get addicted to inhalers
My friend says it is very bad for kids
Can you treat without inhalers doctor?
I don’t want to give my child steroid medication
He’s taking homeopathy/ Ayurvedic meds, exercising - I don’t want to use inhalers
Why is it important to treat adequately?
Most children who wheeze in early childhood eventually stop, some don’t.
But when they have symptoms it is very important to treat. It is also important to use preventer medications (which are steroid inhalers) to reduce these episodes.
Why so? Why be concerned about a bit of cough? Why use the inhaler?
You remember the two changes : muscles tightening and smooth mucosa becoming swollen - these two keep happening, in reversible way then in less reversible ways. Ultimately ‘remodelling’ these breathing tubes.
Poorly treated = costly price to pay later
We now know repeated mild and severe symptoms less than optimally treated in a growing child affects his future health
The child as a young adult is left with less than 100% efficient lungs because of remodelling
Are steroid inhalers safe?
They are, when used in correct way, in the right dose for the right duration. Long term high doses may affect height but are not prescribed in those quantities. Suboptimal control on the other hand definitely affects child’s growth and future health
Aren’t nebulisers better?
Nebulisers are great when you are very unwell and maybe need oxygen. Inhalers use a fraction of the dose, most of it delivered right into lungs, are completely portable. So no, nebulisers are not so great. But somehow they have ducked the stigma!
Aren’t levolin salbutamol, terbutaline syrups better?
No where but in India we use this,against all guidelines
Same medications via inhalers in a small dose, directly act on the lungs Syrups pack x10 more, and have major side effects like fast heart rate, tremors and anxiety
#childhoodAsthma is wished away, stigmatised, poorly diagnosed, inadequately managed - all because of a spasm of stigma, unfounded anxiety and failure on our part to educate parents.
A child with Asthma can lead a fully healthy and normal life with proper treatment.
*End*
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
📍Our perception of #Health and Disease is filled with myths and if you put #Diet into this equation, you spawn an entire mythology, fake expertise, scare mongering, businesses, and needless deprivation of joys of just enjoying your food
1/n
📍These #myths are culturally so deeply ingrained in India, even qualified doctors and nutritionists perpetuate them, even depriving kids of ice creams and fruits they crave for by irrational prescriptive diets
Although a tough nut to crack, I will try to shatter these myths 👇
📍Cold foods or cool drinks ≠ coughs and colds:
Coughs, colds are usually viral illness or respiratory allergies. Chilled juice or icecream does not make you catch a cold. Neither does avoiding them help you recover faster. Warm liquids soothe your throat but they don’t ‘heal’
In the wake of IPC issuing alert on potential adverse effects of #MefenamicAcid, should parents worry about using #Meftal syrups to treat #Fever in #Children?
Let us understand more about Fevers in children and Mefenamic acid.
A thread
via @indiatodayindiatoday.in/india/story/pa…
What causes fevers?
Fever is body’s response to an infection. In children, it is most commonly due to viral infections. Rarely fevers have a non infectious inflammatory cause.
Fever in a child, what to do?
Most childhood fevers due to viral infections are self limiting (lasting a few days) needing simple medications and measures to keep the child comfortable : paracetamol, light clothing and hydration with fluids.
Since schools opened he’s constantly unwell
Is it normal for kids to get fevers every week?
There must be something you can give to boost her immunity?
He always has this cold,the cough hasn’t left him
We’re swimming high tides of cough, cold and fevers 1/n
Paediatricians across the country are running busiest of OPDs, juggling bed availability in wards and PICUs and even falling sick themselves more than ever before
Parents are at their wits end
Classrooms are half empty on some days 2/n
#RespiratoryViruses like #RSV, rhino, #influenza, parainfluenza,
human metapneumo, boca,coronavirus,adeno, enterovirus and #bacteria like strep pneumoniae, pertussis, haemophilus, mycoplasma etc were in constant low level circulation or saw seasonal outbreaks but now.. 3/n
#monkeypox 1. Simply put, a milder version of smallpox, caused by a virus of the same family 2. Was endemic (low level regular occurrence) in some African countries, we now have a global spread but no known epidemiological source 3. Self limiting illness with low CFR (3-6%)
4. Illness can last 2-4 wk, could be more severe in kids and rare complications include eye scarring, secondary infections & pneumonia 5. Although contagious, intimate & prolonged contact with infected person or contact with body fluids directly or from linen etc is needed
6. A person can be contagious 1-2 days prior to developing rashes until all skin rashes have scabbed off 7. Prodrome (0-5 day period leading up to rashes) of fever, swollen glands, chills, sweats, muscle aches, sore throat and severe fatigue is seen
#AntimicrobialResistance is a manmade disaster.
It is amongst the top 10 public health threats facing Humanity.
Available data analysed (for 2019)
4.95 M Deaths
189 M Years of Life lost thelancet.com/journals/lance…
1/n
Global burden of the disease due to AMR is huge, highest in Africa and South Asia 2/n
MRSA, Cephalosporin resistant E coli, Klebsiella are highly prevalent and Pan drug and XDR superbugs are fast emerging 3/n