Moderate to Severe Difficulty Breathing in Children
Difficulty breathing can occur when a child's lungs or heart are
not working well.
Symptoms of moderate difficulty breathing
The child:
Breathes fast.
Tires during
feeding and may stop often to catch his or her breath. This may cause the child
to lose interest in food and eat less.
Needs to use his or her
abdominal muscles to breathe.
Has pale, slightly gray, or blotchy
skin, particularly the face, hands, and feet. The tongue, gums, and lips still
look pink.
Symptoms of severe difficulty breathing
The child:
Breathes very fast or grunts with each
breath.
Looks anxious or exhausted during feeding or is unable to
nurse or take a bottle.
Uses his or her neck, chest, and abdominal
muscles to breathe, causing a "sucking in" between or under the ribs
(retractions).
May flare his or her nostrils when breathing
in.
May need to sit up and lean forward or tilt the nose up as if
sniffing the air.
May fight any attempt to change his or her
position.
Has pale, gray, or bluish skin (especially the tongue,
lips, earlobes, and nail beds), or the skin is mottled (patchy pale and blue
pattern).
By
Healthwise Staff
Primary Medical Reviewer
William H. Blahd, Jr., MD, FACEP - Emergency Medicine
Specialist Medical Reviewer
David Messenger, MD
Last Revised
July 11, 2011
WebMD Medical Reference from Healthwise
Last Updated:
July 11, 2011
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