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PALS | Recognition of Respiratory Failure/ Distress
Description
🌬️ PALS: Recognizing Respiratory Distress vs. Respiratory Failure — High-Yield Study Guide
⚠️ Respiratory problems are the #1 cause of pediatric cardiac arrest. Early recognition = survival.
1️⃣ Respiratory Distress — The Compensation Phase
The child is still maintaining oxygenation + ventilation by working harder.
🔥 Key Signs (“WORK OF BREATHING ↑”)
- Tachypnea (earliest sign)
- Nasal flaring 👃
- Retractions (intercostal, suprasternal, subcostal)
- Head bobbing 🧠↕️ (infants)
- Grunting (auto-PEEP to keep alveoli open)
- Wheezing or stridor (depends on upper vs. lower airway)
- Anxious, irritable
🫁 Breath Sounds
- Upper airway: stridor, barking cough
- Lower airway: wheezing, prolonged expirations
📈 O2 Sat
- Usually normal or mildly low because compensation still works.
2️⃣ Respiratory Failure — Decompensation Phase
The child cannot maintain oxygenation or ventilation. CO₂ retention, hypoxemia, fatigue → arrest.
🚨 Key Signs (“WORK OF BREATHING ↓ — they are giving up”)
- Bradypnea (late + ominous)
- Apnea or gasping
- Weak or absent cry
- Silent chest ❗
- Seesaw respirations
- Cyanosis 💙 (central)
- Poor muscle tone, floppy infant
- Decreased LOC → lethargy → unresponsiveness
🫁 Breath Sounds
- Very diminished or silent chest = impending arrest.
📉 O2 Sat
- Low despite oxygen
💀 Remember:
Kids crash fast. Once they tire out, cardiac arrest follows within minutes.
3️⃣ Causes by Category (PALS Mnemonic)
Upper Airway 🟥
- Croup, anaphylaxis, foreign body
- Signs: Stridor, hoarse voice, barking cough
Lower Airway 🟦
- Asthma, bronchiolitis
- Signs: Wheezing, prolonged expiration
Lung Tissue/Parenchymal 🟩
- Pneumonia, pulmonary edema
- Signs: Crackles, hypoxemia
Disordered Control of Breathing 🟨
- Seizure, head injury, OD
- Signs: Irregular respirations, apnea
4️⃣ Nursing Management & Immediate Actions (High Yield)
In Respiratory Distress:
- Position: sniffing or tripod
- Oxygen: blow-by → NC → NRB
- Nebulizers: albuterol, racemic epi (if indicated)
- Suctioning for infants
- Avoid agitation in upper-airway obstruction
- Prepare for escalation
5️⃣ Red Flags You NEVER Ignore 🚩
- Silent chest
- Bradypnea
- Cyanosis unresponsive to O₂
- Diminishing retractions (NOT improvement—this means fatigue)
- Altered mental status