T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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706.1 | Croup is scary | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Wed Feb 13 1991 11:45 | 25 |
| My son (then 10 months old) had had a cold for a few days. I put
him to bed one night, and at about midnight I heard a barking noise
coming from his room. I went and got him and put him in bed with me.
Then I just listened for a while. He'd bark (cough), bark, bark,
mutter under his breath, and fall back asleep. 10 minutes later he'd
start the whole thing over again. Then I called the doctor.
His first question was whether the baby seemed to have difficulty
breathing. If that happens, they want to see them right away. But
he wasn't. Other than that, I was supposed to keep his room on the
cool side and run a humidifier (or a shower with him in the bathroom).
My doctor also said that a walk outside will help stop the attack.
This was early April, and my doctor said, "It's a beautiful night to
get rid of croup!"
Anyway, Jeff barked from 12:00 till 12:30, again from 2:00 till 2:30,
and at 4:00 I was walking outside with him. Actually, he was kinda
cute. I had him all bundled up and wrapped him in a large blanket,
so he ended up being the size of a stuffed garbage bag, with just
his little face peeking out. We stayed outside for a half hour or
so, and when I brought him in, he had no other attacks.
It was scary, though not as scary as the scene you described. Hope
your son's case is as short-lived as my son's was.
|
706.2 | Just a mild case... | ALLVAX::CREAN | | Wed Feb 13 1991 12:17 | 7 |
| Cory had a mild case of croup when he was just over a year old. He, too,
woke up during the night "barking". It's an awful noise to wake up to !
Our doctor recommended all the same steps as .1. Fortunately, that was
his only attack.
- Terry
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706.3 | Oh yes! | CSC32::WILCOX | Back in the High Life, Again | Wed Feb 13 1991 17:26 | 5 |
| My 3.5 year old has had it either 2 or 3 times. She's gotten an injection
of a steroid for it (not the kind that will bulk her up :-). ). They
really do sound awful.
Liz
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706.4 | | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:50 | 5 |
| Oh, Jeff, I'm so sorry you have had to go through this!
Croup was also discussed in PARENTING_V2. You may want to look there, too.
Carol
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706.5 | More on croup | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Thu Feb 14 1991 13:27 | 8 |
| Matts' better today... although he woke up 'barking' this morning too.
But it wasn't as bad. I think if we had known what was going on it
sure would have helped. We did the prudent thing not knowing if he was
in serious trouble or not. Every once in a while somebody dies because
their condition was under estimated. I didn't want to make that
mistake. Another time I would recognize croup.
Jeff
|
706.6 | Not a fun experience.. | SALEM::EDRY | | Thu Feb 14 1991 14:14 | 18 |
| My daughter came down with Croup when she was about 2 1/2 years old.
I agree with everyone.. it is SCARY. She woke up after sleeping for
several hours, an I heard this noise.. I thought it was the dog
at first. When I went in her room she was standing in her crib
wheezing and barking. I also thought she was choking. I picked her
up an ran for the phone, I was so panic stricken that when I got the
answering service for the doctor I forgot my phone number. Good thing
my husband was standing right there. They told me the same as
everyone else, steam from the shower or cold night air. She was better
in about a half an hour, but I was a wreck for the rest of the night
worrying about her. For the rest of the week I put the humidifier in
her room an turned it up high, an she didn't have another attack.
The doctor did state when I talked to him, that Croup is one of the
scariest things you'll experience as a parent (if you don't know what
your dealing with) but the least harmful.
-Julie
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706.7 | Croup #2! | DELNI::SCORMIER | | Fri Feb 15 1991 09:51 | 21 |
| We are on our SECOND bout of croup in 8 weeks! David (14 months) just
came down with it for the second time on Wednesday. Our Pedi
recommended leaving a window cracked open in his room, and put a
cool-mist humidifier on "HIGH" mist all night. She said the mist in
conjunction with the cool air will help soothe his throat and reduce
the inflamation so he can breathe better. Poor little guy went to bed
in long-johns, socks, pajamas, and a hat! But it does help. He only
woke up twice during the night coughing. When he came down with it the
first time, back in January, I heard what I describe as a "honk" over
the monitor. I have two dogs, one of whom has developed epiglottal
infections several times and sounds exactly like a goose honking, so my
first thought was "How did Bandit get into the baby's room?". I
couldn't believe that horrible sound was coming from my little
munchkin! Another thing that helped was to run the shower very hot and
fill up the bathroom with steam, then give him his bath. Kind of
contradicts the "cool steam" method, but it helped. A walk in the cool
night air, if all else fails, will help. The doctor did say to listen
to his breathing for "striations", indicating his throat was swollen
and he couldn't breathe, but so far we haven't had any problems.
Sarah
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706.8 | Night air helps | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:22 | 9 |
| We've been through croup a few years ago. Learned from my doctor, that
many times parents will rush their children to the emergency room and
the croup will have dissipated by the time they get there. (The night
air theory really works). We used the hot shower method until Carrie
was breathing right, and then took the time out to panic and call the
dr. Turned out she also had an ear infection as well as the cold that
started the croup.
Meg
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706.9 | Cory's got it again | ALLVAX::CREAN | | Tue Feb 19 1991 10:32 | 8 |
| Cory's got croup again ! He was really fussy & whinny yesterday and
woke us up about 2:00 a.m. with that awful cough.
At least we didn't panic this time. And he seems fine this morning,
just signs of a cold.
- Terry
|
706.10 | More on croup | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Tue Feb 19 1991 12:10 | 6 |
| That was a good point about the ear infections being present. We ended
up taking Jeff to the doctor the day after his croup attack, and were
told he had *two* ear infections.
I was talking with a woman who says that her son (now 6) gets croup
*every* winter. Yuk!
|
706.11 | Very Mild Case | SYSTMX::POND | | Tue Feb 19 1991 13:59 | 14 |
| My elder daughter had the croup a little over a year ago when she was
about 2.5. Wasn't *nearly* as bad as the cases described here. She
had a cold, became cranky, and then started sounding like a seal when
she cried. Doctor said it was a mild case of croup; was cleared up
with an antibiotic.
When I heard croup is was relieved it wasn't bronchitis. I'm not sure
which is worse...
I'm glad Elizabeth's was a very mild case.
Regards,
LZP
|
706.12 | It's serious! | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:44 | 44 |
| The EMT in me is prompting this response. I couldn't count the number
of times we've been called for "a child having difficulty breathing",
and by the time we get there we meet a panic stricken parent in the
driveway holding a child who by this time hardly needs an emergency
transport. The cool night air is the best thing ever. What we'll
usually do en route to a hospital is to use a cool humidfied oxygen via
a mask, relief will usually come quickly. My son's Godmother is an RN
and related several nights of sitting on the back step holding a croupy
child. It really is scarey and if it scares you that much, by all
means call 911 for help! Without a special instrument to look down the
child's throat you have no way to know if something more serious is
going on.
Epiglotitis has been mentioned, and that would probably be the most
valid reason for at least having the child checked. When the
epiglottis swells you're dealing with a *true* medical emergency, and
many, if not most cases require a trachostomy or intubation to be
performed. (A tube inserted directly into the airway, either
through the mouth or a surgical incision in the neck)
From a personal point of view, we went through a problem at the
hospital with AJ, he woke up *screaming and stiff* when he was under a
year, I called the ambulance (before I was part of their staff) and
moved him quickly, only to be told it was from "red ears" and was sent
home, after spending the night up with no improvement we brought him
back and found that his oxygen level was down near 80%, a seriously
dangerous level. He was having a very bad brochial spasms, which we
now know as asthma and spent several days on monitors, IV drugs, the
"croup" tent, and very seriously ill. The first doctor in the ER was
disciplined for her misdiagnosis, and fortunately no long term damage
was done. We knew as we left the ER that is wasn't his ears and that
something more serious was going on. Bottom line if you think
somethings wrong, don't let some ER resident try to tell you different.
Someone mentioned steroids, I too was concerned about this considering
all the bad press they had received from athletes. Steroids
(prednisone in most cases) actually
reduce inflamation, take cortisone cream as an example. It's a different
type of steroid, and the bottom line is that it takes about 24 hours
after the first dose for it to start working. It doesn't matter
whether it was given in an IV or by mouth. I too though "oh boy
steroids, a miracle cure" until the pedi pulmonary specialist told me
that it takes time to reduce the inflamation of bronchitis or asthma.
Lyn
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706.13 | us, too! | CUPMK::VARDARO | Nancy | Thu Apr 25 1991 17:41 | 15 |
| I didn't pay much attention to this note until today ..my son
woke up at 1:30 this morning with the same symptoms ..difficulty
breathing and that awful noise! It scared me half to death ..but
he was diagnosed over the phone by his pedi and some time in the
cold night air really did help.
I kept him home today because I was told that he could be contagious.
I was wondering ..how long does this last? Should I expect a repeat
of last night?? He seems fine today except that his breathing sounds like
he's 'out of breath' a lot of the times ..and when he does cough,
he's still barking. I was also told that it's most likely a virus
so that anitbiotics wouldn't help ...
I just wish I paid more attention to the symptoms in this note
earlier - it might not have made last night such a nightmare.
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