Symptoms
- Wheezing is a high-pitched purring or whistling sound
- You can hear it best when your child is breathing out
- Rapid breathing at a rate of over 40 breaths per minute
- Tight breathing (having to push the air out)
- Coughing (may cough up very sticky mucus)
- Fever and a runny nose often precede the breathing problems.
- Symptoms are similar to asthma. About 30% of children with bronchiolitis later develop asthma. This is more likely if they have close relatives with asthma. Also likely if they have bronchiolitis more than 2 times.
Diagnosis
- A doctor can diagnose bronchiolitis by listening to the chest with a stethoscope.
Cause
- A narrowing of the smallest airways in the lung (bronchioles) causes wheezing. This narrowing results from swelling caused by a virus.
- The respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes most bronchiolitis. RSV occurs in epidemics almost every winter.
- People do not develop life-long immunity to the RSV virus. This means they can be infected many times.
Prevention of Spread to Others
- Cover the nose and mouth with a tissue when coughing or sneezing.
- Wash hands often. After coughing or sneezing are important times.