Negative Pressure Pulmonary Edema and Croup

Negative Pressure Pulmonary Edema and CroupCaring for patients is very humbling. I once described the EM Mindset as being one that requires Humble Arrogance (See EMDocs.net) – requiring humility to know you can’t know it all and arrogance to believe that your skills can make a difference in another’s life.  Certainly, this requires a continual assessment of the balance between the two extremes.  Sometimes that balance is easy, but other times we don’t even recognize the disequilibrium until our patients alert us to it. Recently, a patient reminded me that, while most croup is rather benign, it can become complicated. Let us use my recent humbling experience to refresh our memories about Negative Pressure Pulmonary Edema and Croup.

 

Croup: What is Usual

  • Usually caused by a virus
  • Usually 1-2 episodes per year
  • Usually seen in the Fall and Winter months
  • Usually affects children 6 mos – 3 years with peak at 2 years
  • Usually short in duration (1-2 days)
  • Usually standard therapies effectively treat the condition.
  • Usually does NOT require hospitalization.

 

Croup: What is Feared

  • Airway Obstruction
    • Obviously, this is the major emergent condition that needs to be avoided.
    • This is why stridor garners so much attention in the ED.
  • Negative Pressure Pulmonary Edema
    • Occurs as a result of the airway obstruction and leads to pulmonary edema and hypoxia. [Chen, 2010]
    • May be present even after obstruction has resolved.

 

Negative Pressure Pulmonary Edema

  • Also referred to as “Post-Obstructive Pulmonary Edema”
  • Can be caused from severe, sudden upper airway obstruction (Type I)
    • Cases reported due to laryngospasm, epiglottis, croup, aspirated FB’s, and angioedema. [Chen, 2010]
    • Even seen in agitated patient after biting down on endotracheal tube. [Bhattacharya, 2016]
    • Can also develop after surgery (especially ENT T&A surgery) for upper airway obstruction. (Type II) [Sonsuwan, 2014; Mehta, 2006]
  • Forced inspiration against a closed or obstructed glottis generates excessive negative intrathoracic pressures [Bhattacharya, 2016]
    • Known as Muller Maneuver.
    • -140 cm H2O compared to baseline of -4 cm H2O
  • This increases venous return to right heart and increases pulmonary venous pressures.
  • Additionally, low cardiac output leads to increased high afterload pressures.
  • These combine to cause increased hydrostatic pressures –> fluid moves from pulmonary vasculature to the interstitial space –> Pulmonary Edema –> Hypoxia
  • Acute airway obstruction can also lead to hypoxia, which further causes pulmonary vasoconstriction, pulmonary hypertension, and right heart failure.
  • Usually occurs within minutes of airway obstruction; often resolves within 12-24 hours. [Bhattacharya, 2016Chen, 2010]

 

Presentation

  • May present with obvious signs of upper airway obstruction (stridor, increased work of breathing/retractions, hoarseness, drooling).
    • May also present after the episode of obstruction resolved (so, perhaps you took appropriate actions to fix the problem with positioning, medications, or intubation).
  • Signs of Pulmonary Edema [Chen, 2010]
    • Hypoxemia
    • Frothy sputum in nonintubated patient or edema fluid in endotracheal tube.
    • Bilateral infiltrates on CXR

 

Treatment

  • Early recognition is important (remember, hypoxia in a patient with “croup” is odd).
  • Beta-agonists may help improve fluid clearance. [Bhattacharya, 2016]
  • Supplemental oxygenation
  • May need Positive Pressure Ventilation
  • Use of diuretics
    • Still controversial [Chen, 2010]
    • May be beneficial, if patient is not hypotensive. [Bhattacharya, 2016]
  • May require Prone Positioning or even ECMO.

 

Moral of the Morsel

  • Even the Simple can become Complicated! Remain Vigilant!
  • Even the Common can cause Humility.
  • Not all that has stridor has croup: don’t bark up the wrong tree.
  • Not all croup is simple: if there is hypoxia, think about negative pressure pulmonary edema.

 

References

Bhattacharya M1, Kallet RH1, Ware LB2, Matthay MA3. Negative-Pressure Pulmonary Edema. Chest. 2016 Oct;150(4):927-933. PMID: 27063348. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Zhonghua Er Ke Za Zhi. 2014 Jul;52(7):531-4. PMID: 25224060. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Dubey PK1. Post extubation negative pressure pulmonary edema due to posterior mediastinal cyst in an infant. Ann Card Anaesth. 2014 Apr-Jun;17(2):161-3. PMID: 24732622. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Sonsuwan N1, Pornlert A2, Sawanyawisuth K3. Risk factors for acute pulmonary edema after adenotonsillectomy in children. Auris Nasus Larynx. 2014 Aug;41(4):373-5. PMID: 24746668. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Bajwa SS1, Kulshrestha A. Diagnosis, prevention and management of postoperative pulmonary edema. Ann Med Health Sci Res. 2012 Jul;2(2):180-5. PMID: 23439791. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Chen IC1, Chen KH, Tseng CM, Hsu JH, Wu JR, Dai ZK. Croup-induced postobstructive pulmonary edema. Kaohsiung J Med Sci. 2010 Oct;26(10):567-70. PMID: 20950784. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther. 2006 Feb;41(2):64-78. PMID: 16493558. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Mehta VM1, Har-El G, Goldstein NA. Postobstructive pulmonary edema after laryngospasm in the otolaryngology patient. Laryngoscope. 2006 Sep;116(9):1693-6. PMID: 16955006. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Ead H1. Review of laryngospasm and noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. Dynamics. 2003 Fall;14(3):9-12. PMID: 14725141. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Lang SA1, Duncan PG, Shephard DA, Ha HC. Pulmonary oedema associated with airway obstruction. Can J Anaesth. 1990 Mar;37(2):210-8. PMID: 2178789. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Travis KW, Todres ID, Shannon DC. Pulmonary edema associated with croup and epiglottitis. Pediatrics. 1977 May;59(5):695-8. PMID: 857236. [PubMed] [Read by QxMD]

Sean M. Fox
Sean M. Fox

I enjoy taking care of patients and I finding it endlessly rewarding to help train others to do the same. I trained at the Combined Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics residency program at University of Maryland, where I had the tremendous fortune of learning from world renowned educators and clinicians. Now I have the unbelievable honor of working with an unbelievably gifted group of practitioners at Carolinas Medical Center. I strive every day to inspire my residents as much as they inspire me.

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