What are the symptoms of neonatal pneumonia?
summary
The treatment of neonatal pneumonia needs to start from the foundation, in order to avoid this kind of occurrence, female friends must take preventive measures. The basic treatment method is diet treatment. A healthy and scientific diet can help treat pneumonia effectively. People should not ignore the importance of diet treatment for neonatal pneumonia. Eat some food that is helpful to pneumonia. What are the symptoms of neonatal pneumonia?. What about it? Let's take a look at it.
What are the symptoms of neonatal pneumonia?
First, the child has fever, refeeding, irritability, wheezing and other symptoms, early body temperature is 38 ~ 39 ℃, can also be as high as 40 ℃. In addition to respiratory symptoms, children can be accompanied by mental malaise, irritability, loss of appetite, shivering, diarrhea and other systemic symptoms. Refusals, choking milk, vomiting and dyspnea are common in infants.
Second: at the beginning of the frequent irritative dry cough, followed by throat sputum, severe cough can be accompanied by vomiting, choking milk. The respiratory surface is shallow, the nasal alar is agitated, and some children may have mild cyanosis around the mouth and fingernails. Pulmonary signs may not be obvious in the early stage, and small and medium blisters can be heard later. When combined with pleural effusion, percussion sound and / or respiratory sound disappeared.
Third: infantile pneumonia is often accompanied by cardiac insufficiency. Congestive heart failure should be considered if the heart rate increases to 160-200 beats / min, the liver enlarges or obviously enlarges in a short time, the complexion is pale, the mouth is cyanotic, the limbs are edematous and the urine is little.
matters needing attention
Through the above introduction, many friends must have some understanding of the symptoms of neonatal pneumonia. Strengthen skin and oral care, especially for patients with sweating, timely change wet clothes, and dry the sweat with hot towel, which is good for skin heat dissipation and resistance to bacteria. For children with phlegm, sputum should be coughed up as much as possible to prevent poor sputum discharge from affecting the recovery of pneumonia. If the patient's condition permits, parents should often pick up the child and gently pat the back. Bedridden children should turn over frequently, which can not only prevent pulmonary congestion, but also make sputum easy to cough up, which is helpful for rehabilitation.