I have a 3 year old little girl who is suffering with reoccurring chest infections. She had had at least 8 in the last year, her most recent one saw us being rushed to hospital by ambulance from the doctors surgery as her oxygen levels where so low. We are waiting for an appointment for a sweat test and also physiotherapist on her chest but Iām worried that so many infections could cause her little lungs some permanent damage. Does anyone have any advice on this?
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Kirsty83
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Hi Kirsty83, so sorry to hear your little girl has been so poorly. Itās bad enough for us adults but when theyāre little itās so difficult for them to understand. I would ask for a referral to see a consultant. If your GP is not helpful then I would ask to see the community paediatrician. Sounds like they need to give you some support and specialist advice and hopefully find out whatās going on. I hope that helps a little. Also try and keep her in a warm and constant temperature and if she goes outside try and gently cover her mouth with a scarf so the cold air doesnāt get in. Welcome to the group of itās your first time, do let us know how you and your daughter get on xx
Thank you for the advice, I will be making an appointment to see our gp tomorrow. Itās all just so stressful not knowing the cause of it or even if there is a cause or itās just āone of those thingsā. Just a waiting game I suppose. I will make sure her mouth is covered thank you, thatās really helpful.
It must be extremely stressful for you. Iāve got little ones who have had repeated breathing problems (croup) which theyāve been hospitalised for and itās awful feeling like your just waiting for the next emergency. I was also a paediatric nurse (before children and developing my complex respiratory issues) - I would definitely press hard to be referred and then get a plan in place for when she gets infections. In the meantime make notes of when sheās had infections, how long theyāve lasted and what treatment was needed. This really helps them take you more seriously. Hope itās not too cold where you are. Take care xx
I can understand you being terribly worried about the little mite, but it's surprising how resilient little children are. I would have thought permanent damage at that age is most unlikely, but it's most important to make sure that those appointments are dealt with quickly. So I would advise keeping pressure on by frequent phone calls requesting early dates.
She needs to be referred to a paediatric respiratory specialist asap. I cannot think what your GP is up to. The sweat test is to determine whether she has cystic fibrosis. This is now very old fashioned as the genes for this can be picked up by blood test in specialist units as can other genetic conditions which result in these multiple infections. Yes these infections can result in permanent damage to the lungs. Whatever is the cause it needs diagnosis, treatment and ongoing management now. Go stamp your foot, donāt take no for an answer and get her to the right people. Good luck
I feel for you and your little girl but I am pleased you have joined our family here.
You do not say who has arranged the sweat test, nor the respiratory physiotherapist.
I agree with littlepom (we have both had a lifelong lung condition) that you need to be very proactive in getting your dear little girl referred to the appropriate paediatric respiratory consultant. I wonder has she had a ct scan? Eight excerbations in 1 year is far too many to go by without further investigation. In any event the quicker the consultants see her the quicker they will have a baseline assessment.
You might find speaking to one of the nurses at BLF 03000 030 555 before you speak to your GP helpful. They are very knowledgeable about paediatric lungs.
I had a very strong Mum Kirsty and she was my rock and that was in the days when folks doffed their caps to doctors on the pedestals.
You are a great Mum and great advocate for you little Daughter.
Thank you for your reply, yeah Iāve begged them for a year almost to do something, she was only referred in the end by a doctor at a and e because she was rushed there. Our own gp just seems to fob us off. Iām going to make an appointment and insist on being seen by a specialist. Thank you so much.
Just had a thought if you havenāt got a consultant. You could check out a hospital in a large city you have access to online the paediatric respiratory consultants. You could always contact them and explain the situation and ask if they would consider seeing your little daughter if you had a referral from your GP. Then you can let the GP know the name of the consultant and that s/he has agreed a consultation upon referral.
A tip: Hopsital sites differ on the amount of professional information they give online re particualr consutants, some good some not so. Sometimes you can get a better insight by looking the same consultant at a private cinic, where they are more likely sell themselves by giving previous posts held and areas of medicine of special interest to them.
Thank you everyone for your helpful information, At present my little girl has another chest infection š¢. Day 1 I took her to our local primary care centre who sent us straight to A and E due to low oxygen levels. We were seen and sent home as it was āviralā. The next day she was still really unwell so I went to gp who also sent us to A and E to be reassessed, they did a chest X-ray and gave us an antibiotics my daughter was to take once daily for 3 days and sent us home again, the next morning my daughter had her appointment for a sweat test which the doctor at A and E told me it would be ok to go ahead with although she was poorly. We arrived for the sweat test and where sent immediately back to A and E by the nurse. My daughter was then assessed by a senior doctor and admitted onto the childrenās ward for iv antibiotics. We stayed in hospital two days, have been sent home now with oral antibiotics and still no sweat test done. The doctor in a and e mentioned the possibility of giving my little girl antibiotics which she will take everyday long term as a preventative. Surely they should be finding out why it keeps happening not just prescribing medicine to reduce it? Thank you for the support.
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