The child who is completely well and the child who is visibly seriously unwell and decompensating are both fairly straightforward scenarios. The child who is very well causes no clinical concern. The child who is decompensating causes unambiguous and immediate clinical concern. If only decision making was always this easy.
The child who is febrile with tachycardia but a reassuring level of activity and interaction is also relatively straightforward. The trouble is that we end up having to make decisions about those children who have a reduced activity level or whose interaction is not completely reassuring. Often there is a disconnect between what guidelines tell us to worry about and how worried we actually are. I believe that this often occurs when we intuitively include something in our decision making that is rarely featured in guidelines: the pattern of the illness.
Everything written tends to be geared towards the snapshot:
- What is the heart rate?
- What is the temperature?
- How active and interactive is the child?
This is problematic in any acute specialty assessing febrile children. Catch the child at the wrong time and they seem to trigger multiple red flags. Base your assessment on the snapshot alone and you may be falsely reassured.
As covered in the previous post, physiology in young children (not so much babies and older children) responds to illness with what can be dramatic changes even in uncomplicated low-risk infections. Unfortunately the same abnormalities can be seen in more clinically significant infections. No one thing is particularly sensitive or specific when deciding whether to be worried.
So if a snapshot can be misleading and there is significant overlap between low-risk and high risk scenarios, how can we decide when a clinical presentation is high risk for sepsis or serious bacterial infection?
The pattern of symptom progression is probably the answer. In the past, research has concentrated on the snapshot, over-emphasising the assessment of various parameters at a single point in time. Human intelligence allows us to incorporate the more complex business of considering three very important factors that previous research has not often considered or emphasised:
- The most recent worst state of the child
- The most recent best state of the child
- The pattern and progression of symptoms over time
The evaluation of the best and worst states and the pattern may be include retrospective (history) and prospective (a period of observation) information. The likelihood is that you already put a great deal of weight on these factors in your decision making. It is also likely that you have recognised that there are two main patterns of illness in children. I have represented these in the following diagram, without labelling which is the low risk scenario and which is high risk.
Intuitively, I would assume that you recognise the dotted line as the high risk pattern and the solid line as the typical pattern of a low risk clinical picture of childhood febrile illness.- Using a snapshot will over-diagnose serious illness, simply due to the pre-test probability of sepsis and serious bacterial infection (SBI) in the low-risk (which is most children) child.
- Over time, the repeated realisation that children usually have an uncomplicated, self-limiting illness despite the severity of symptoms and abnormal physiological parameters risks de-sensitises the clinician to the possibility of sepsis/SBI. Abnormality becomes normalised and we learn to ignore things that have poor specificity for a serious outcome.
Telling the difference between self-liniting childhood illness and serious infection is complex and requires us to process an awful lot of information. When it comes to features like best and worst states and the pattern of symptoms over time, your intuition is probably already joining these dots for you. I think you should trust that intuition.
Edward Snelson
Dot-joiner but likes to colour outside the lines
@sailordoctor