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Bronchiolitis

Nursing Children and Young People, 2016
In England last year, nearly 40,000 babies and young children with bronchiolitis were admitted to hospital. This infection is usually caused by the respiratory syncytial virus, and in most cases symptoms are mild and last only a few days. However, a quality standard published in the summer by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)
Bourke, Thomas, Shields, Michael
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When is bronchiolitis not bronchiolitis?

Archives of disease in childhood - Education & practice edition, 2017
A 6-month-old male infant had a fourth hospital admission with respiratory distress. He was tachypnoeic and required oxygen but was orally feeding well. He was diagnosed with bronchiolitis and admitted for supportive care. He was born at 30 weeks gestation, had required nasal continuous positive airway pressureĀ for 10 days and was oxygen dependent for
Laura Gardner, Morag N J Wilson
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BRONCHIOLITIS

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1996
Bronchiolitis is a commonly encountered disease of infants and young children. Mortality is low, but morbidity is significant. Treatment requires considerable commitment of time from medical and nonmedical personnel. Decisions about treatment modalities remain controversial.
M E, Bar-on, J R, Zanga
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Bronchiolitis

Pediatric Annals, 1986
Bronchiolitis is an acute respiratory disease of early childhood characterized clinically by upper respiratory tract signs of rhinitis and congestion and by lower respiratory tract signs of tachypnea, retractions, wheezing, and rales. The presence of wheezing differentiates bronchiolitis from many of the other entities to be considered in the child ...
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Bronchiolitis

Pediatrics In Review, 1993
Bronchiolitis is an acute respiratory illness precipitated by a viral infection and resulting in obstruction of the small airways. While mortality due to bronchiolitis is low in developed countries, it remains an important illness because of the frequency with which infants require hospitalization and because of the potential association with asthma ...
J R, Welliver, R C, Welliver
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Bronchiolitis

Nursing Standard, 2015
Essential facts Bronchiolitis is a common lung infection affecting babies and young children. Around 30,000 infants are admitted to hospital in England each year with the illness. About one third of children in the UK will have the infection in the first year of life, and most will have had it by the age of two.
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Bronchiolitis

Pediatrics In Review, 2009
After completing this article, readers should be able to: 1. Recognize the clinical presentation of bronchiolitis. 2. Be aware of the recommendations made in the current American Academy of Pediatrics clinical practice guideline for diagnosis and management of bronchiolitis. 3.
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The treatment of bronchiolitis

Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2008
Bronchiolitis is the commonest reason for hospital admission in infancy and the most frequent cause of acute respiratory failure in children admitted to paediatric intensive care units in the UK and North America. The respiratory syncytial virus accounts for most cases of bronchiolitis, however, new virus isolation techniques have led to the discovery ...
H Vyas, Michael P. Yanney
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Bronchiolitis.

Clinical evidence, 2004
Bronchiolitis is the most common lower respiratory tract infection in infants, occurring in a seasonal pattern, with highest incidence in the winter in temperate climates, and in the rainy season in warmer countries. Bronchiolitis is a common reason for attendance at and admission to hospital.We conducted a systematic review and aimed to answer the ...
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