Spotting The Sick Child (STSC)
This section is a work-in-progress, writing notes from the Spotting the Sick Child (STSC) online course *
The 3 minute toolkit
ABCDENTTT
A – Airway – Is it obstructed?
- eg secretions, foreign body, stridor
- unprotected airway - tolerance of OP airway?
B – Breathing – Is the child struggling to breathe?
- Assess respiratory rate, look for recession/accessory muscle use, check oxygen saturation, auscultate the chest
- Auscultation - wheeze (asthma), crepitations (bronchiolitis), bronchial breathing
- SpO2 < 94% imply significant illness
C – Circulation – Is there evidence of poor circulation?
- Assess colour skin, heart rate, capillary refill time (on sternum and fingers/toes), blood pressure, warm or cold hands/feet?
- Pallor, mottling (hypoperfusion)
- Cold peripheries and delayed CRT (> 2 seconds) imply peripheral vasoconstriction(ie sepsis, dehydration)
- Peripheral CRT is more sensitive to early hypoperfusion than central CRT, but is also affected by cold environment
- Children maintain a normal BP until very unwell due to effective peripheral vasoconstriction
D – Disability – What is the child’s neurological state?
- Assess pupil response to light, limb tone and movement, AVPU score/GCS, irritable (unconsolable)
- Pupils
- Sluggish pupils - drug overdose or post-ictal
- Changing sizes - ongoing seizures
- Asymmetry - space occupying lesion
- Abnormal gaze following seizure
E – Exposure – Have you exposed the child and examined top-to-toe?
- Rashes – viral rash, infectious disease rash, non-blanching rash (septicaemia?)
- Any evidence of injury/trauma
- Bruises – Always think Non-accidental injury in the non-mobile child
- Use any safeguarding skills you have learnt on accredited courses in child protection to identify any marks on the skin, or how a child is kept, or their interaction with the parent(s)/guardian(s).
ENT – Ears, Nose and Throat
Mandatory in any febrile child
Pink ear drums, and large red tonsils are seen in most febrile children and are non-specific for otitis media or tonsillitis
T – Temperature
- Use a tympanic or axillary (infant) thermometer.
- You may require a rectal thermometer in the very unwell child
T – Tummy – Is this soft? Distended? Tender? What are the bowel sounds like? Any masses? Any hernias? Tenderness, peritonism, masses? Distractible pain?
- In boys, never forget to examine the testis (testicular torsion = surgical emergency)
- Urinalysis
D E F G – Don’t Ever Forget Glucose! 3 - 5 mmol/l