Croup Sentence Examples

croup
  • If a child has had croup before, it tends to recur when they have a cold.

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  • The back should be straight, strong but not too long with a broad and very slightly sloping croup.

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  • Croup is one of the most common respiratory illnesses in children.

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  • Eureka was a dark Appaloosa with dark spots on white loins, quarters and croup.

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  • For 2 years he went tho similar recurrences of respiratory distress each time he got croup.

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  • Prompt administration of steroids often pre-empts the need for intubation in most cases of moderate or severe croup.

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  • Steroids improve airway patency in croup, haemangioma, lymphoma and some mediastinal masses.

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  • It also contains information on how to manage simple childhood illnesses like fever, croup and dehydration.

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  • When a child has croup, that portion of the airway just below the vocal cords narrows and becomes swollen, making breathing both noisy and labored.

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  • Croup is a broad term describing a group of illnesses that affect the larynx, trachea, and bronchi.

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  • One of the most common respiratory illnesses in children, croup is frequently noted in infants and children and can have a variety of causes.

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  • Though in the early 2000s cases of croup are normally mild, it can still be dangerous.

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  • Croup affects the vocal cords and the area just below, the voice box, or larynx, and the windpipe, or trachea.

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  • The characteristic symptoms of croup can be better understood by knowing the anatomic makeup of a child's larynx.

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  • Viral croup is caused by a viral infection in the trachea and larynx.

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  • Stridor is fairly common with a mild case of croup, especially if the child is active or crying.

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  • However, if a child has stridor at rest, the child may have severe croup.

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  • Spasmodic croup is usually precipitated by an allergy or mild upper respiratory infection.

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  • Children with spasmodic croup normally do not have a fever.

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  • Spasmodic croup can sometimes be difficult to differentiate from viral croup.

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  • The viruses causing croup are highly contagious and easily transmitted between individuals through sneezing and coughing.

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  • Croup accounts for about 15 percent of all respiratory tract infections in children seen by physicians.

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  • The parainfluenza viruses (types 1, 2, and 3) are the most frequent causes of croup, accounting for approximately 75 percent of all cases diagnosed.

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  • Croup may also be caused by influenza A and B, adenovirus, measles, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).

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  • Other possible causes of croup are bacteria, inhaled irritants, allergies, and acid reflux.

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  • Most cases of croup can be safely managed at home, but parents should call their child's doctor for advice, even if it is in the middle of the night.

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  • The croup is possibly caused by an inhaled object or by an insect sting.

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  • The diagnosis of croup is usually made based on the description of symptoms by the parent, as well as a physical examination.

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  • The most important part of treating patients with croup is maintaining an open airway.

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  • If a child wakes up in the middle of the night with croup, he or she should be taken to the bathroom.

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  • If another attack of croup recurs that night or the next, the steam treatment should be repeated.

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  • Though a study in the early 2000s cast some doubt on the efficacy of using steam or mist, it does seem to be helpful for most children with croup.

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  • Several other treatments are possible if the croup is severe enough to warrant the child's being seen by a physician.

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  • Croup is normally a self-limiting disease with an excellent prognosis.

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  • There is some speculation that children with a history of croup may be at a higher risk for developing asthma, but the evidence was not clear as of 2004.

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  • The best way to prevent croup is to prevent the causative infections.

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  • The onset of croup can be frightening, especially when it comes on suddenly.

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  • Croup, an inflammation of the trachea (windpipe) and larynx (voice box), is the most common cause of stridor in children under age two.

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  • See also Croup; Foreign objects; Vocal cord dysfunction.

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  • Other viral infections may also strike the patient, including croup, bronchitis, laryngitis, or viral pneumonia.

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  • Stridor-A term used to describe noisy breathing in general and to refer specifically to a high-pitched crowing sound associated with croup, respiratory infection, and airway obstruction.

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  • Patients with serious hemophilus infections require bed rest and a humidified environment (such as a croup tent) if the respiratory tract is affected.

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  • People with laryngeal diphtheria are kept in a croup tent or high-humidity environment; they may also need throat suctioning or emergency surgery if their airway is blocked.

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  • Of the two other sons of Louis Bonaparte and Hortense, the elder, Napoleon Charles (1802-1807), died of croup at The Hague; the second, Napoleon Louis (1804-1831), died in the insurrection of the Romagna, leaving no children.

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  • A gentleman in the audience had traveled from Cardiff to see this croup - how's that for enthusiasm?

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  • Small children typically have quite a narrow larynx, so even a slight decrease in the airway's radius may lead to a large decrease in the air flow, leading to the symptoms of croup.

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  • Although spasmodic croup is associated with the same viruses that cause viral croup, spasmodic croup tends to recur and may be an indication of some type of allergic reaction instead of a direct infection.

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  • Croup is most commonly brought on by a viral infection.

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  • Stridor is a term used to describe noisy breathing in general and to refer specifically to a high-pitched crowing sound associated with croup, respiratory infection, and airway obstruction.

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  • The diseases to which the act applies are smallpox, cholera, membranous croup, erysipelas, scarlatina or scarlet fever, typhus, typhoid, enteric, relapsing, continued or puerperal fever, and any other infectious disease to which the act has been applied by the local authority of the district in the prescribed manner.

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  • Subsequent epidemics have not been attended by anything like this mortality, but there has, however, been a steady decrease, principally among young children, owing to whooping-cough, tuberculosis and croup. Every Fijian child seems to contract yaws at some time in its life, a mistaken notion existing on the part of the parents that it strengthens the child's physique.

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