Paediatric Emergency Medicine Notes
4th Edition Β· Professional Notes

Paediatric Emergency Medicine

Clean, exam-focused, clinically structured notes designed for rapid revision, ward reference, and emergency department recall.

πŸ“˜ Chapter-wise summary πŸ₯ Rapid clinical review πŸŒ— Day mode + Dark mode
Section 1

General Approach & Chronic Conditions

1.1 Approach to the Paediatric Patient

πŸ’‘
Core principle: Build rapport first, observe before touching, and use distraction rather than a forced examination.
History red flags
  • <50% normal fluid intake
  • Prolonged lethargy
  • No urine output for >6 hours
  • Inconsolable crying
  • Parental concern out of proportion
Examination warning signs
  • Non-blanching rash β†’ sepsis / meningococcaemia
  • Bilious vomiting β†’ obstruction until proven otherwise
  • Grunting β†’ respiratory distress
Normal age-based vital signs
Age groupHRRR
Neonate110–17025–60
Child70–13516–34
Adolescent60–12014–26

1.2 Common Chronic Conditions

Cerebral palsy
  • Respiratory infections are common ED presentations
  • Watch for aspiration, constipation, and PEG complications
Cystic fibrosis
  • Exacerbations present with change in sputum, cough, and lung function
  • Treat with IV antibiotics and chest physiotherapy
Autism spectrum disorder
  • Reduce sensory overload and involve caregivers early
  • Limit staff changes and use visual preparation
Ex-premature infants
  • Higher risk of severe bronchiolitis and pneumonia
  • Immunise by chronological age
Section 2

Resuscitation & Advanced Life Support

2.2 PBLS and 2.3 PALS

  • 2-rescuer CPR: 15:2 in infants and children; newborn 3:1
  • Compression depth: one-third of the AP chest diameter
  • Compression rate: 100–120/min
  • Defibrillation: 4 J/kg for shockable rhythms
  • IO access: use if IV access not secured within 60–90 seconds

Shock and Sepsis

🚨
Hypotension is a late sign. Early recognition depends on tachycardia, poor perfusion, and prolonged capillary refill.
  • Initial fluid bolus: 10–20 mL/kg crystalloid, reassess after each bolus
  • Give antibiotics within 1 hour
  • Lactate >4 mmol/L suggests severe sepsis
  • After 40 mL/kg fluid, start adrenaline or noradrenaline if needed
Section 3

Analgesia & Procedural Sedation

3.1–3.2 Pain Control and Sedation

βœ“
Preferred approach: use multimodal analgesia whenever possible.
  • Sucrose for neonates during minor procedures
  • Topical anaesthetics such as EMLA or amethocaine
  • Intranasal fentanyl for moderate to severe pain
  • Ketamine provides dissociative sedation and preserves airway reflexes
  • Propofol gives deep sedation but no analgesia and can cause apnoea
Section 4

Neonatal Emergencies

4.4 Acute Neonatal Emergencies

🚨
Bilious vomiting is malrotation or volvulus until proven otherwise.
  • Duct-dependent lesions: PGE1 0.05–0.1 mcg/kg/min
  • Neonatal seizures may be subtle; first-line is phenobarbitone 20 mg/kg
  • Pathological jaundice includes onset within 24 hours or conjugated rise
  • Neonatal resuscitation prioritises effective ventilation
Section 5

Cardiology

Murmurs, Syncope, Tet Spells, and SVT

  • Innocent murmurs are systolic, short, soft, and localised
  • Syncope red flags: exertional episode, no prodrome, family history of sudden death
  • Tet spell management: knee-chest position, oxygen, morphine, fluid, propranolol
  • SVT: vagal manoeuvres, then adenosine 100–300 mcg/kg
  • Unstable SVT requires synchronised cardioversion 0.5–2 J/kg
Section 6

Respiratory Emergencies

Croup, Asthma, Pneumonia, Bronchiolitis

  • Croup requires steroids in all cases: dexamethasone 0.15 mg/kg
  • Severe croup with stridor at rest: nebulised adrenaline
  • Asthma first line: salbutamol MDI + spacer and oral prednisolone
  • Life-threatening asthma: continuous bronchodilator, ipratropium, IV magnesium
  • Bronchiolitis treatment is supportive; avoid routine bronchodilators and steroids
Section 7

Gastroenterology & Hepatology

Bilious Vomiting, Pyloric Stenosis, Gastroenteritis

🚨
Bilious vomiting = surgical emergency.
  • Pyloric stenosis: projectile non-bilious vomiting in a 2–8 week infant
  • Button battery in the oesophagus needs urgent removal
  • Multiple magnets carry high perforation risk
  • Gastroenteritis: use ORS first; ondansetron can reduce vomiting
Section 8

Neurology

Status Epilepticus and Raised ICP

  • Stepwise treatment: benzodiazepine β†’ levetiracetam or phenytoin β†’ intubation
  • Raised ICP signs: Cushing triad, bulging fontanelle, altered consciousness
  • Emergency measures: head up 30Β°, hypertonic saline, avoid hypoxia and hypotension
  • Complex febrile seizure is focal, prolonged, or recurrent within 24 hours
Sections 9–10

Infectious Diseases & Endocrine

Febrile Child, Meningitis, MIS-C, DKA

  • UTI is the most common serious bacterial infection in young children
  • Meningitis: LP unless contraindicated; start cefotaxime or ceftriaxone promptly
  • MIS-C presents with persistent fever, shock, and multi-organ involvement
  • DKA insulin infusion: 0.05–0.1 units/kg/hr after rehydration begins
  • Adrenal crisis: hydrocortisone IV, dextrose, and fluid resuscitation
Sections 11–12

Haematology / Oncology & Renal

Febrile Neutropenia, Sickle Cell, HUS, Nephrotic Syndrome

  • Febrile neutropenia requires IV broad-spectrum antibiotics within 60 minutes
  • Sickle cell acute chest syndrome: antibiotics, spirometry, exchange transfusion if severe
  • HUS is mainly supportive care; avoid antibiotics in STEC-associated disease
  • Nephrotic syndrome treatment: prednisolone 60 mg/mΒ²/day
Section 13

Trauma & Burns

Primary Survey and Burns

  • Catastrophic haemorrhage first; use a tourniquet when indicated
  • Tension pneumothorax: needle thoracostomy followed by chest drain
  • Massive transfusion protocol: 1:1:1 ratio plus TXA 15 mg/kg
  • Burns first aid: cool running water for 20 minutes within 3 hours
  • Modified Parkland: 3 mL/kg/%TBSA
Sections 23–24

Poisoning & Envenomation

Poisoning Principles and Antidotes

  • Activated charcoal only for selected high-risk ingestions within 1 hour
  • Paracetamol overdose uses the nomogram and NAC
  • One-pill-kill agents include calcium channel blockers, sulfonylureas, tricyclics, and chloroquine
  • Organophosphate poisoning: atropine plus pralidoxime
  • Snakebite: pressure immobilisation and antivenom for systemic envenoming
Section 29

Essential Procedures

Airway, IO Access, Chest Drain, LP

  • RSI commonly uses ketamine with rocuronium or suxamethonium
  • Cuffed ETT size formula: age/4 + 3.5
  • Waveform capnography is the gold standard for tube confirmation
  • Chest drain site: 4th–5th intercostal space, anterior axillary line
  • Do not delay antibiotics for lumbar puncture in a critically ill child