Would've appreciated more info on this--why you think it's related and what you see as the causal relationship. |
agree with 7:51 ... actually, having the child stand in front of the freezer really helps with croup symptoms. at least that's been our experience. alternating that with the hot steamy room treatment was really effective for my 16 month old's last bout of croup -- his 4th, followed by his umpty-jillionth double ear infection.
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same here - mine drink only refrigerated water/milk. I can see how the cold drink can make the vocal cords inflexible. Perhaps that's the reason? |
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Our youngest got it all the time. It always scared the crap out of me as I could see her straining to get air. We had multiple trips to the ER, even on vacation. She finally grew out of it at about 5. I don't miss those days.
We never had her tested for allergies. The docs always dismissed my concerns about why she was prone to croup. |
| Our DD (10 months) got the croup at the end of March for the first time. Since then she has had reoccuring bouts of croup, usually starts with a cold, but has never really lost the baseline bark. Last week we took her to a pulmonologist (after getting frustrated with our pediatrician) who ordered a chest x-ray and upper GI. Both came back normal. He prescribed predisone(which has made her incredibly restless and hungry) and twice daily treatments of flovent (using a spacer). Today is her last day of steroids. Her bark seems to be less severe, but is still present. Has anyone ever experienced this? I am getting increasingly frustrated and concerned. |
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If it's cold outside, 10 minutes standing on the porch (with the little one well-bundled of course) can stop a croupy cough in its tracks. I suppose the freezer, as PP mentioned, is a good substitute in the warmer months.
I'd never heard about a connection to asthma or allergies. My kid has no allergies, a little asthma, and has had croup one time. When I was a child, I had croup about once a year; I have never had any allergies or asthma. |
| My son woke up with croup again. He is nine and has not been diagnosed with allergies or asthma. We are glad we bought a nebulizer. |
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Recurrent croup should be looked at by an ENT as it is an upper airway issue. Also, for acute attacks, COLD air is beneficial NOT hot.
To 16:48 - that is absolutely correct! What a great explanantion by your doctor (and amazing recall by you .
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Yes, my youngest was very susceptible to croup. If she got a cold or had any sinus drainage it would typically turn to croup.
She's now 6 and we have not had a bout in 18 months. They do outgrow it, but it is painful until they do. |
Similar story at my house. My DD got the croup every year, at least once or twice, until at age 8 she started to get laryngitis along with upper respitory illnesses. Taking daily zyrtec helps minimize it a great deal. So glad to be done with the nebulizer and steroids. |
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OP here. It is interesting to see this thread back up.
My DD is now 25 months old and was diagnosed with Reactive Airway Disease or intermittent asthma. She does not have any asthma symptoms, but an X-ray showed her airway was slightly narrowed on one side which leads to croup when her throat is aggravated---by reflux or sinus drainage. Basically, when she gets a runny nose 24 hours later she will develop the croupy cough. We let her try to go unmedicated for croup once, at 14 months, and it lasted a full week without getting better. Since then, when we hear that croupy cough (typically in the morning after a night's sleep), we give her one dose of prednisolone and that nips it in the bud. We also give her an inhaler/spacer with flovent, nasacort spray for adenoids, and ranitidine at night to protect the airway from reflux (she was a bigtime spitter as a baby). I am getting a bit frustrated that for all the preventative care she still needs the prednisolone. We have another appt. with the pulmonologist. After allergy testing was negative, we are still keeping that on the radar because she had a one-time allergic reaction that needed an epi pen in the ER after a slow reaction (itchy eyes, swelling of cheeks, drooling) over the course of 3 hours. I now carry an epi pen just in case, although we have no idea what could have caused that and if it has anything to do with her RAD. I wish that someone could just tell me what is going on and how to keep her healthy. I know many kids have much more serious problems, ours is more sporadic with our DD. It is just frustrating as a parent to not really know what is going on with your kid completely or how to keep her healthy. |
My daughter been having the croop since she was 3 yrs old. She is now 8 and matter of fact she has it right now. Dr says that its just in the air outside, but there has to be something else causing this. She has gotten it a total of 9 times!! Including today. Ive given her the steriod doses prescribed by her physician, and it works and she gets better and then a month or two down the way she gets it again. Theres no wheezing. I feel bad that she gets it alot.
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Yes, ours did - both of them. Until we yanked the tonsils and adenoids of the older one and ran humidifiers in the younger one's room at the first sign of a runny nose. (humidifiers did not do the trick for the older one - and he got recurrent strep). |
| My son is 7 years old now and gets croup all the time since he was younger. I'm told every time nothing can be done. I do place him on the nebulizer with steroids to lessen the cough and that does work along with tylenol and sometimes some over the counter cough meds. The croup usually lasts a week or so. I feel so bad for him. He gets it every couple of months. But I did read on here about the allergy meds ( claritan, zyrtec, etc) and I'm going to give that a try. Thanks everyone! |
This sounds a lot like my child's "asthma" attacks. She used to get asthma/wheezing with every cold during the winter, but seems to be doing better this year. Her asthma sounds like a dry cough/bark where she is sucking in air and having a lot of difficulty breathing. We used to treat it with pre-emptive albuterol at night when she had a cold, and puffs from an inhaler during an attack. Our doctor never mentioned croup, but maybe that's because she was still wheezing (though not as noticeably) when we would bring her in during the day. |