Don't go barking up the wrong tree: Thinking beyond infection in a toddler with stridor.

Journal: The American Journal Of Emergency Medicine
Published:
Abstract

A toddler presented to the emergency department with persistent stridor and barky cough for 4 weeks and progressive dysphagia for 1 week. During this time, he had sought medical attention 6 additional times and had been treated for pneumonia, wheezing and croup, receiving antibiotics and several courses of steroids without improvement. On the final presentation, airway imaging did not reveal a foreign body. However, bedside laryngoscopy demonstrated bilateral vocal cord paralysis. Further imaging revealed an intracranial posterior fossa mass which provided the unifying diagnosis for his persistent symptoms.

Relevant Conditions

Laryngitis, Croup, Stridor, Endoscopy