Book contents
- Cases in Paediatric Critical Care Transfer and Retrieval Medicine
- Cases in Paediatric Critical Care Transfer and Retrieval Medicine
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Models of Care
- Chapter 2 Logistics and Organisation
- Chapter 3 Air Retrieval
- Chapter 4 Improving Team Performance
- Chapter 5 I Like Children, but I Don’t Fancy Intubating One …
- Chapter 6 Upper Airway Obstruction
- Chapter 7 Just Bronchiolitis?
- Chapter 8 Foreign Body Aspiration
- Chapter 9 A Child with Facial Swelling
- Chapter 10 Pneumonia and Empyema
- Chapter 11 The Child with a Cough and Concerning White Cell Count
- Chapter 12 Worsening Stridor, to Intubate … or Not to Intubate
- Chapter 13 Difficult Asthma
- Chapter 14 Transfer of Child with Pulmonary Hypertension
- Chapter 15 A Blue Baby
- Chapter 16 A Shocked Blue Baby Who Won’t Improve
- Chapter 17 Under a Spell
- Chapter 18 A Decline in Function
- Chapter 19 Rash, Tachycardia and Irritability
- Chapter 20 Is the Baby’s Heart Rate Supposed to Be Slower than Mine?
- Chapter 21 A Pale Lethargic Girl
- Chapter 22 Too Fast for Comfort
- Chapter 23 Chickenpox and Other Bugs
- Chapter 24 When Amoxicillin Just Doesn’t Cover It
- Chapter 25 Tumour Lysis
- Chapter 26 Respiratory Insufficiency on Maximal Support
- Chapter 27 Cardiac Arrest
- Chapter 28 A Neurosurgical Emergency
- Chapter 29 A Fall from Height
- Chapter 30 Brain against the Clock
- Chapter 31 When Vomit Turns to Blood
- Chapter 32 Bilious Vomiting and Distended Abdomen?
- Chapter 33 What Can’t Go Down, Must Come Up
- Chapter 34 Not All Burns Can Be Seen
- Chapter 35 Drowning and Organ Donation
- Chapter 36 The Cold Shocked Child
- Chapter 37 Encephalopathy
- Chapter 38 Adolescent Psychosis and Seizures
- Chapter 39 The Collapsed Neonate
- Chapter 40 A Floppy Breathless Child
- Chapter 41 Fever in the Time of COVID-19 (SARS-CoV2)
- Chapter 42 A Palliative Care Transfer Home
- Chapter 43 A Story that Just Doesn’t Add Up
- Chapter 44 Multidrug Overdose
- Chapter 45 Death Is a Possible Outcome
- Chapter 46 A Cold, Unconscious 12-Year-Old Girl
- Chapter 47 Another Collapsed Neonate
- Chapter 48 The Challenges of Chemotherapy
- Chapter 49 Diarrhoea and Vomiting
- Chapter 50 A Life-Threatening Sickle Cell Crisis
- Chapter 51 A Baby with Acute Liver Failure
- Chapter 52 Air Transport of a Critically Ill Baby
- Chapter 53 Crew Resource Management
- Chapter 54 Chest Drain Insertion
- Chapter 55 Paediatric Airway Clearance for Acute Management on Retrieval
- Chapter 56 Use of Ultrasound for Paediatric Retrieval
- Chapter 57 Vasoactive Drugs on Retrieval
- Index
- References
Chapter 47 - Another Collapsed Neonate
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2021
- Cases in Paediatric Critical Care Transfer and Retrieval Medicine
- Cases in Paediatric Critical Care Transfer and Retrieval Medicine
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Models of Care
- Chapter 2 Logistics and Organisation
- Chapter 3 Air Retrieval
- Chapter 4 Improving Team Performance
- Chapter 5 I Like Children, but I Don’t Fancy Intubating One …
- Chapter 6 Upper Airway Obstruction
- Chapter 7 Just Bronchiolitis?
- Chapter 8 Foreign Body Aspiration
- Chapter 9 A Child with Facial Swelling
- Chapter 10 Pneumonia and Empyema
- Chapter 11 The Child with a Cough and Concerning White Cell Count
- Chapter 12 Worsening Stridor, to Intubate … or Not to Intubate
- Chapter 13 Difficult Asthma
- Chapter 14 Transfer of Child with Pulmonary Hypertension
- Chapter 15 A Blue Baby
- Chapter 16 A Shocked Blue Baby Who Won’t Improve
- Chapter 17 Under a Spell
- Chapter 18 A Decline in Function
- Chapter 19 Rash, Tachycardia and Irritability
- Chapter 20 Is the Baby’s Heart Rate Supposed to Be Slower than Mine?
- Chapter 21 A Pale Lethargic Girl
- Chapter 22 Too Fast for Comfort
- Chapter 23 Chickenpox and Other Bugs
- Chapter 24 When Amoxicillin Just Doesn’t Cover It
- Chapter 25 Tumour Lysis
- Chapter 26 Respiratory Insufficiency on Maximal Support
- Chapter 27 Cardiac Arrest
- Chapter 28 A Neurosurgical Emergency
- Chapter 29 A Fall from Height
- Chapter 30 Brain against the Clock
- Chapter 31 When Vomit Turns to Blood
- Chapter 32 Bilious Vomiting and Distended Abdomen?
- Chapter 33 What Can’t Go Down, Must Come Up
- Chapter 34 Not All Burns Can Be Seen
- Chapter 35 Drowning and Organ Donation
- Chapter 36 The Cold Shocked Child
- Chapter 37 Encephalopathy
- Chapter 38 Adolescent Psychosis and Seizures
- Chapter 39 The Collapsed Neonate
- Chapter 40 A Floppy Breathless Child
- Chapter 41 Fever in the Time of COVID-19 (SARS-CoV2)
- Chapter 42 A Palliative Care Transfer Home
- Chapter 43 A Story that Just Doesn’t Add Up
- Chapter 44 Multidrug Overdose
- Chapter 45 Death Is a Possible Outcome
- Chapter 46 A Cold, Unconscious 12-Year-Old Girl
- Chapter 47 Another Collapsed Neonate
- Chapter 48 The Challenges of Chemotherapy
- Chapter 49 Diarrhoea and Vomiting
- Chapter 50 A Life-Threatening Sickle Cell Crisis
- Chapter 51 A Baby with Acute Liver Failure
- Chapter 52 Air Transport of a Critically Ill Baby
- Chapter 53 Crew Resource Management
- Chapter 54 Chest Drain Insertion
- Chapter 55 Paediatric Airway Clearance for Acute Management on Retrieval
- Chapter 56 Use of Ultrasound for Paediatric Retrieval
- Chapter 57 Vasoactive Drugs on Retrieval
- Index
- References
Summary
You have been referred a 3-day old, 4.1 kg baby who was born by normal vaginal delivery after an uncomplicated antenatal course. Her parents had attended the A&E the day before with concerns regarding poor feeding but were discharged home, as first-time parents, with advice. They re-presented the following day with increasing concern regarding lethargy and not feeding. On admission to A&E the baby was grunting but had no other signs of respiratory distress. He was mottled and cool peripherally, with normal heart sounds and palpable femoral pulses. He was floppy and very difficult to rouse, only crying feebly to painful stimuli. On arrival in A&E he had capillary glucose and gas performed. The glucose was just in normal range at 2.8 mmol/L but lactate was elevated at 4.3 mmol/L. Initial management in A&E comprised of starting the baby on high flow nasal cannula oxygen, IV access was sited and he was given three 10 ml/kg boluses of normal saline as volume resuscitation. The local team remained concerned and had escalated management to an anaesthetic review but felt he would need transfer to somewhere with a higher level of care, hence the referral.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022