Diferencia entre revisiones de «Chest pain (peds)»
(Text replacement - "Category:Peds" to "Category:Pediatrics") |
(Add verified PubMed references (PMIDs 21541647, 38473000)) |
||
| (No se muestran 20 ediciones intermedias de 10 usuarios) | |||
| Línea 1: | Línea 1: | ||
{{PediatricPage|chest pain}} | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*Common cause of presentation to the ED, especially in adolescents<ref>Jindal A, Singhi S. Acute chest pain. Indian J Pediatr. 2011 Oct;78(10):1262-7. PMID 21541647</ref> | |||
*The vast majority (>95%) of pediatric chest pain is benign and non-cardiac in origin | |||
*Most common causes are musculoskeletal (costochondritis, muscle strain), idiopathic, and respiratory<ref>Huang SW, Liu YK. Pediatric Chest Pain: A Review of Diagnostic Tools in the Pediatric Emergency Department. Diagnostics (Basel). 2024 Mar 1;14(5). PMID 38473000</ref> | |||
*Cardiac causes are rare but must be identified: [[pericarditis]], [[myocarditis]], arrhythmias, coronary anomalies | |||
*Family history plays an important part screening for familial history of sudden death, [[hypertrophic cardiomyopathy]], [[long QT syndrome]], or [[Marfan syndrome]] | |||
===Red Flags for Cardiac Etiology=== | |||
*Exertional chest pain or syncope | |||
*Associated palpitations, [[syncope]], or near-syncope | |||
*History of [[Kawasaki disease]] (coronary aneurysms) | |||
*Known congenital heart disease or cardiac surgery | |||
*Family history of sudden cardiac death at age <50, [[hypertrophic cardiomyopathy|HCM]], [[long QT syndrome|LQTS]] | |||
*Pain associated with fever (consider [[pericarditis]], [[myocarditis]]) | |||
*New murmur or abnormal cardiac exam | |||
*[[Marfan syndrome]] habitus (consider aortic root dissection) | |||
==Clinical Features== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
===History=== | |||
*Onset, location, duration, character, radiation, exertional vs. rest | |||
*Reproducibility with palpation (suggests musculoskeletal) | |||
*Associated symptoms: fever, dyspnea, palpitations, syncope, cough, anxiety | |||
*Recent illness, trauma, or strenuous activity | |||
*Drug/substance use in adolescents (energy drinks, stimulants, vaping) | |||
===Physical Exam=== | |||
*Vital signs including pulse oximetry | |||
*Chest wall palpation for tenderness (reproducible tenderness suggests musculoskeletal cause) | |||
*Cardiac auscultation: murmurs, rubs, gallops, muffled heart sounds | |||
*Lung auscultation: wheezing, crackles, decreased breath sounds | |||
*Assess for [[Marfan syndrome]] features: tall stature, arm span > height, arachnodactyly, pectus deformity | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{DDX CP peds}} | |||
==Evaluation== | |||
===Low Risk (Typical Musculoskeletal)=== | |||
* | *Reproducible chest wall tenderness, no red flags | ||
* | *No further workup generally needed | ||
* | *Consider [[CXR]] if history of cough, fever, or dyspnea | ||
== | ===Moderate to High Risk=== | ||
* | *[[ECG]]: evaluate for ST changes, arrhythmia, prolonged QTc, ventricular hypertrophy, Brugada pattern | ||
*[[CXR]]: cardiomegaly, pneumothorax, pneumonia, mediastinal widening | |||
* | *[[Troponin]] if concern for [[myocarditis]] or pericarditis with myocardial involvement | ||
* | *[[BNP]] or NT-proBNP if concern for heart failure | ||
*[[ | *Consider [[echocardiography]] for: new murmur, abnormal ECG, suspected pericardial effusion, known cardiac disease | ||
* | *Consider CT angiography for suspected [[pulmonary embolism]] (rare in pediatrics, but consider in adolescents with risk factors) | ||
*Consider | |||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
===Musculoskeletal (Most Common)=== | |||
*Reassurance — this is the most important intervention | |||
*NSAIDs ([[ibuprofen]]) for pain control | |||
*Activity modification as needed | |||
===Cardiac Causes=== | |||
*'''[[Pericarditis]]''': NSAIDs + [[colchicine]], cardiology consultation | |||
*'''[[Myocarditis]]''': admit, cardiology, hemodynamic monitoring, avoid NSAIDs | |||
*'''Arrhythmia''': see [[SVT (peds)]], [[ventricular tachycardia]] | |||
*'''[[Pneumothorax]]''': see [[Pneumothorax]] management | |||
*'''Aortic pathology''': emergent surgical consultation | |||
==Disposition== | |||
===Admit=== | |||
*Hemodynamically unstable | |||
*Suspected [[myocarditis]] or large pericardial effusion | |||
*Significant arrhythmia | |||
*[[Pneumothorax]] requiring intervention | |||
===Discharge=== | |||
*Musculoskeletal chest pain with normal exam and no red flags | |||
*Stable patients with mild pericarditis (arrange cardiology follow-up) | |||
*Provide clear return precautions: worsening pain, exertional symptoms, syncope, palpitations, fever | |||
*Cardiology referral for: abnormal ECG, family history of sudden death, exertional symptoms | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Chest pain]] | *[[Chest pain]] | ||
*[[Acute chest pain]] | |||
*[[Pericarditis]] | |||
*[[Myocarditis]] | |||
*[[Kawasaki disease]] | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | |||
[[Category:Cardiology]] | [[Category:Cardiology]] | ||
[[Category:Pediatrics]] | [[Category:Pediatrics]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | |||
Revisión actual - 10:59 22 mar 2026
This page is for pediatric patients. For adult patients, see: chest pain
Background
- Common cause of presentation to the ED, especially in adolescents[1]
- The vast majority (>95%) of pediatric chest pain is benign and non-cardiac in origin
- Most common causes are musculoskeletal (costochondritis, muscle strain), idiopathic, and respiratory[2]
- Cardiac causes are rare but must be identified: pericarditis, myocarditis, arrhythmias, coronary anomalies
- Family history plays an important part screening for familial history of sudden death, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, long QT syndrome, or Marfan syndrome
Red Flags for Cardiac Etiology
- Exertional chest pain or syncope
- Associated palpitations, syncope, or near-syncope
- History of Kawasaki disease (coronary aneurysms)
- Known congenital heart disease or cardiac surgery
- Family history of sudden cardiac death at age <50, HCM, LQTS
- Pain associated with fever (consider pericarditis, myocarditis)
- New murmur or abnormal cardiac exam
- Marfan syndrome habitus (consider aortic root dissection)
Clinical Features
History
- Onset, location, duration, character, radiation, exertional vs. rest
- Reproducibility with palpation (suggests musculoskeletal)
- Associated symptoms: fever, dyspnea, palpitations, syncope, cough, anxiety
- Recent illness, trauma, or strenuous activity
- Drug/substance use in adolescents (energy drinks, stimulants, vaping)
Physical Exam
- Vital signs including pulse oximetry
- Chest wall palpation for tenderness (reproducible tenderness suggests musculoskeletal cause)
- Cardiac auscultation: murmurs, rubs, gallops, muffled heart sounds
- Lung auscultation: wheezing, crackles, decreased breath sounds
- Assess for Marfan syndrome features: tall stature, arm span > height, arachnodactyly, pectus deformity
Differential Diagnosis
Chest pain (peds)
- Idiopathic (most common)
- Precordial catch syndrome
- Sudden, intense pain with deep inspiration, self-resolving
- Usually located to one finger point and the intercostal space (often at apex of heart)[3]
- Musculoskeletal
- Pulmonary
- Pneumothorax
- Pneumonia (peds)
- Pulmonary embolism
- Aortic dissection
- Uncommon but consider with history of connective tissue disease
- GI
- Psychosomatic
- Cardiac (1%)
- Left-sided obstructive lesions
- Dysrhythmias
- HOCM
- Pericarditis
- Prinzmetal's angina (vasospasm)
- MI
- Rare, even post-Kawasaki
- Consider coronary artery dissection
- Mitral valve prolapse
- Anomalous coronary arteries]
Evaluation
Low Risk (Typical Musculoskeletal)
- Reproducible chest wall tenderness, no red flags
- No further workup generally needed
- Consider CXR if history of cough, fever, or dyspnea
Moderate to High Risk
- ECG: evaluate for ST changes, arrhythmia, prolonged QTc, ventricular hypertrophy, Brugada pattern
- CXR: cardiomegaly, pneumothorax, pneumonia, mediastinal widening
- Troponin if concern for myocarditis or pericarditis with myocardial involvement
- BNP or NT-proBNP if concern for heart failure
- Consider echocardiography for: new murmur, abnormal ECG, suspected pericardial effusion, known cardiac disease
- Consider CT angiography for suspected pulmonary embolism (rare in pediatrics, but consider in adolescents with risk factors)
Management
Musculoskeletal (Most Common)
- Reassurance — this is the most important intervention
- NSAIDs (ibuprofen) for pain control
- Activity modification as needed
Cardiac Causes
- Pericarditis: NSAIDs + colchicine, cardiology consultation
- Myocarditis: admit, cardiology, hemodynamic monitoring, avoid NSAIDs
- Arrhythmia: see SVT (peds), ventricular tachycardia
- Pneumothorax: see Pneumothorax management
- Aortic pathology: emergent surgical consultation
Disposition
Admit
- Hemodynamically unstable
- Suspected myocarditis or large pericardial effusion
- Significant arrhythmia
- Pneumothorax requiring intervention
Discharge
- Musculoskeletal chest pain with normal exam and no red flags
- Stable patients with mild pericarditis (arrange cardiology follow-up)
- Provide clear return precautions: worsening pain, exertional symptoms, syncope, palpitations, fever
- Cardiology referral for: abnormal ECG, family history of sudden death, exertional symptoms
See Also
External Links
References
- ↑ Jindal A, Singhi S. Acute chest pain. Indian J Pediatr. 2011 Oct;78(10):1262-7. PMID 21541647
- ↑ Huang SW, Liu YK. Pediatric Chest Pain: A Review of Diagnostic Tools in the Pediatric Emergency Department. Diagnostics (Basel). 2024 Mar 1;14(5). PMID 38473000
- ↑ Pickering D. Precordial catch syndrome. Arch Dis Child. 1981;56(5):401-403. doi:10.1136/adc.56.5.401
