• Hospital pediatrics · May 2019

    Multicenter Study Observational Study

    Hospital Course of Croup After Emergency Department Management.

    • Anna Sofi Asmundsson, Joseph Arms, Rahul Kaila, Mark G Roback, Carly Theiler, Cynthia S Davey, and Jeffrey P Louie.
    • University of Minnesota Masonic Children's Hospital, Minneapolis, Minnesota; asmun003@umn.edu.
    • Hosp Pediatr. 2019 May 1; 9 (5): 326-332.

    ObjectivesTo describe inpatient management of patients with croup admitted from the emergency department (ED).MethodsIn a multicentered, cross-sectional observational study based on retrospective chart review, we identified children 6 months to 5 years of age with a discharge diagnosis of croup. All patients were evaluated in the ED and treated with at least 1 dose of racemic epinephrine (RE) before admission. Children with hypoxia or directly admitted to the PICU were excluded.ResultsWe identified 628 admissions for croup. Significant interventions, defined as additional RE, helium-oxygen use, or PICU transfer, occurred in 142 patients (22.6%). A total of 137 children received additional RE on the inpatient ward, and 5 received RE and were transferred to the PICU. No patient was treated with helium-oxygen. A total 486 (77.4%) of patients did not receive significant interventions postadmission. Length of stay for children not requiring significant intervention was, on average, <24 hours (18.8 hours [SD 9.3]; range 1.2-111 hours). Children with tachypnea (odds ratio = 2.5; P = .002) on arrival to ED and patients who had ED radiographs (odds ratio = 1.7; P = .018) had increased odds of receiving a significant intervention after admission.ConclusionsLess than one-quarter of children admitted to the general wards for croup received significant interventions after admission. Tachypnea in the ED and use of radiograph were associated with an increased use of significant interventions.Copyright © 2019 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

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