Croup (Laryngotracheobronchitis)
Basics
- Infection causing inflammation/edema of larynx and subglottic airway
- Presents with barking cough, inspiratory stridor, hoarseness, and respiratory distress
- Usually viral; spasmodic croup is recurrent, often without viral prodrome
- Most common airway obstruction cause in young children
Epidemiology
- Age: 6 months to 3 years, peak at 18 months; rare outside 3 months to 6-7 years
- Male predominance
- Seasonal peak: fall and early winter but can occur year-round
- Incidence: 1.3% of ED cases; 3-7% require hospitalization; <3% require airway intervention
- 4.4% return ED within 48 hours
Etiology and Pathophysiology
- Viral causes:
- Parainfluenza virus types 1 & 2 (>80%)
- RSV, influenza A/B, adenovirus, rhinovirus, enteroviruses, measles (unvaccinated), metapneumovirus
- Bacterial causes (less common): Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis
- Spasmodic croup: unclear etiology; possibly allergy, airway hyperreactivity, reflux
- Congenital subglottic stenosis may present as recurrent croup
- Narrow pediatric airway + negative inspiratory pressure β airway narrowing and stridor
Risk Factors
- Prior intubations, airway abnormalities, prematurity, age <3 years
Prevention
- Spread via droplets; contagious up to 3 days after illness onset or until afebrile
- Influenza vaccination may reduce risk
- Hand hygiene important
Associated Conditions
- Possible future asthma association with hospitalization for croup
- Consider anatomical or allergic causes if recurrent
- COVID-19 may cause atypical or severe croup
Diagnosis
- Clinical diagnosis: abrupt onset barking cough, inspiratory stridor, hoarseness, chest wall indrawing
- Fever usually low-moderate; absence does not exclude croup
- Severity signs: nasal flaring, retractions, tripoding, tachypnea; late signs include cyanosis, fatigue
- Westley Croup Severity Score for assessment (β€2 mild; 3-7 moderate; 8-11 severe; β₯12 respiratory failure)
- SARS-CoV-2 testing if severe or prolonged
Physical Exam
- Tachypnea, tachycardia common
- Pulse oximetry usually normal unless severe
- Stridor at rest, aggravated by agitation
- Hoarseness present
- Decreased breath sounds or signs of respiratory failure = concern
Differential Diagnosis
- Foreign body aspiration
- Bacterial tracheitis (high fever, rapid worsening)
- Retropharyngeal/peritonsillar abscess
- Allergic reactions/angioedema
- Epiglottitis (rare post-Hib vaccination)
- Anatomic anomalies (tracheomalacia, subglottic stenosis)
- COVID-19 related severe croup
Diagnostic Tests
- Usually clinical; labs not routinely needed
- WBC mild lymphocytosis; bandemia suggests bacterial infection
- Imaging not routine; neck films show "steeple sign" (40-60%) but nonspecific
- Imaging and laryngoscopy reserved for atypical cases or suspicion of alternative diagnoses
Treatment
General Measures
- Supportive care; minimize agitation to reduce distress
- Oxygen for hypoxia or distress
- Frequent clinical monitoring
- Heliox may be used but evidence limited
Medications
- Corticosteroids for all severity levels; dexamethasone preferred 0.6 mg/kg PO/IM/IV (max 16 mg)
- Nebulized epinephrine for moderate to severe (Westley β₯3) cases:
- Racemic epinephrine 0.05 mL/kg of 2.25% (max 0.5 mL)
- L-epinephrine 0.5 mL/kg of 1:1000 (max 5 mL)
- Observe 2 hours post-epinephrine for rebound
- Avoid antitussives and decongestants
- Antibiotics only if bacterial infection suspected
- Humidified air has no proven benefit
Surgery/Procedures
- Intubation rare; use smaller size tube (0.5β1 mm smaller)
- Indicated for respiratory failure or fatigue from work of breathing
Admission and Nursing
- Admit if poor response to treatment, recurrent stridor after epinephrine, oxygen requirement, pneumonia, or other serious conditions
- Discharge criteria:
- β₯2 hours since last epinephrine dose
- Received steroids
- No stridor at rest or breathing difficulty
- Tolerating oral fluids
- Normal color, air entry, and consciousness
- Established home care and follow-up
Ongoing Care
- Diet: cool liquids, small frequent feedings
- Educate on illness course, avoid agitation, hydration, hand hygiene
- Seek emergency care for cyanosis, lethargy, drooling, severe respiratory distress
- COVID-19 croup may require quarantine guidance
Prognosis
- Generally good with supportive care
- Severe cases respond to intensive management
- Recurrence rare; if frequent, investigate other causes
Complications
- Subglottic stenosis (post-intubation)
- Bacterial tracheitis
- Cardiopulmonary arrest
- Pneumonia
ICD10: - J05.0 Acute obstructive laryngitis [croup] - J20.9 Acute bronchitis, unspecified - J38.5 Laryngeal spasm
Clinical Pearls: - Most common in fall/winter, children 6 months to 3 years - Inspiratory stridor is hallmark and should raise suspicion - Nighttime symptoms common - Prioritize clinical diagnosis and management over labs/imaging - Recurrence warrants further evaluation - Consider alternate diagnoses in toxic or atypical presentations - Decreasing noise or air movement can signal respiratory failure - Corticosteroids are mainstay; oxygen and epinephrine for moderate-severe cases