Quick Overview
Acute wheeze in children is a common paediatric emergency requiring rapid severity assessment and stepwise treatment. NICE NG80 provides evidence-based guidance for managing acute asthma exacerbations. Distinguishing viral-induced wheeze from asthma influences long-term management, though acute treatment protocols overlap significantly.
Core Facts & Concepts
Severity Assessment (NICE NG80)
| Severity | Clinical Features | Oxygen Sats | Peak Flow |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moderate | Talking in sentences, SpO₂ ≥92%, HR/RR increased | ≥92% | >50% predicted |
| Severe | Can't complete sentences, SpO₂ <92%, using accessory muscles | <92% | 33-50% predicted |
| Life-threatening | Silent chest, poor respiratory effort, altered consciousness, cyanosis, exhaustion | Variable | <33% predicted |

Age-Specific Inhaler Devices
- <3 years: pMDI + spacer with face mask
- 3-5 years: pMDI + spacer with mouthpiece
- >5 years: pMDI + spacer or breath-actuated inhaler
Viral Wheeze vs Asthma
- Viral wheeze: Age <3 years, only with viral URTI, no interval symptoms, no atopy
- Asthma: Multiple trigger wheeze, interval symptoms, personal/family atopy history
Problem-Solving Approach
Stepwise Acute Management
-
Oxygen: Target SpO₂ 94-98% (all severities)
-
First-line bronchodilators:
- Salbutamol: 10 puffs via spacer (moderate) OR nebulised 2.5mg <5yrs/5mg ≥5yrs (severe)
- Repeat every 20 minutes as needed
-
Add ipratropium bromide (severe/life-threatening):
- Nebulised 250mcg mixed with salbutamol
- Give 3 doses in first hour
-
Systemic steroids (all severities):
- Prednisolone 20mg (2-5yrs) or 30-40mg (>5yrs) PO for 3 days
- IV hydrocortisone 4mg/kg if vomiting
-
Magnesium sulphate (severe not responding):
- Single dose IV 40mg/kg (max 2g) over 20 minutes
-
Aminophylline infusion (life-threatening refractory):
- 5mg/kg loading dose over 20 minutes, then 1mg/kg/hr
- Only if not on oral theophyllines
⚠️ Warning: Silent chest indicates life-threatening asthma-prepare for PICU transfer and consider salbutamol infusion

Analysis Framework
Discharge Criteria (all must be met)
- Stable on 3-4 hourly salbutamol for 12-24 hours
- SpO₂ >94% in air
- Inhaler technique checked and adequate
- PEF >75% best/predicted (if age appropriate)
- Written asthma action plan provided
- GP follow-up within 2 working days
Red Flags Requiring Senior/ICU Input
- SpO₂ <92% despite high-flow oxygen
- Exhaustion or reduced consciousness
- Rising PaCO₂ (hypercapnia indicates respiratory failure)
- Poor response to 3 doses of bronchodilators
Visual Aid
Key Points Summary
✓ Severity markers: SpO₂ <92%, silent chest, inability to complete sentences, altered consciousness define severe/life-threatening asthma
✓ Bronchodilator dosing: Salbutamol 10 puffs via spacer equals nebulised dose; add ipratropium for severe cases (3 doses in first hour)
✓ Steroids for all: Prednisolone 20-40mg (age-dependent) for 3 days reduces relapse rates-give early in all acute presentations
✓ Magnesium threshold: Single IV dose (40mg/kg, max 2g) for severe asthma not responding to initial bronchodilators
✓ Device matters: Wrong inhaler technique is a common cause of treatment failure-always check and demonstrate correct use
✓ Discharge safety: Require stability on 3-4 hourly salbutamol, SpO₂ >94%, and confirmed GP follow-up within 48 hours
✓ Viral wheeze distinction: Affects prophylaxis decisions but not acute management-treat acute episodes identically to asthma
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