Asthma Initiative of Michigan (AIM)
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Asthma and Babies/Small Children

Is it Asthma?

Sometimes it's hard to tell if a baby or small child has asthma or another disease with symptoms that are a lot alike. Not all children with asthma will wheeze.

It may be asthma if:

  There is a history of repeated

  • Coughing
  • Wheezing
  • Shortness of breath or fast breathing
  • Chest tightness

  Symptoms are made worse by

  • Viral infection (such as a viral cold or bronchitis)
  • Smoke (tobacco, wood, etc.) or other irritants (like strong perfumes or odors)
  • Exercise or active playing
  • Things the child is allergic to, such as pollen or animal fur
  • Changes in weather/humidity
  • Crying or laughing

  Symptoms occur/worsen at night, waking the child and/or the parent

No single finding will tell the doctor that the child has asthma, but if the child has several of these findings, it means it is more likely. Learn more about how doctors diagnose asthma in young children.

Asthma is different in babies simply because their lungs do not work as well as the lungs of an older child or adult. Because of this, an asthma attack can quickly cause lung failure. So learn how to keep your baby healthy!

  • Have regular doctor's visits, even when your baby is not having asthma symptoms.
  • Make a complete Asthma Action Plan with your doctor and make sure you know how to recognize your baby’s green, yellow and red zones.
  • Go over it with the doctor or asthma counselor at each visit.
  • Be ready. Don’t wait until your baby has trouble breathing before you learn what to do in an emergency.
  • Know your baby's Asthma Action Plan well, and think about how you’ll get to the doctor, emergency room or hospital, and who will care for your other children.

   GREEN ZONE  

  • Baby feels good and acts normal. Follow your Asthma Action Plan to stay in this zone!

   YELLOW ZONE      –      RED ZONE  

If your baby has asthma symptoms, like wheezing, coughing or rapid breathing, take care of it right away! Follow the Asthma Action Plan your doctor gave you for taking care of asthma symptoms. Babies can change from a few symptoms to a severe attack very fast!

  • Warning signs for an asthma attack can be different between babies. Make sure you know what warning signs to look for in your baby. Get emergency help if:

    • his or her breathing rate increases (to more than 40 breaths/minute while the infant is sleeping). To find breaths/minute, count the number of breaths the baby takes in 15 seconds and multiply that number by 4.
    • suckling or feeding stops.
    • the skin between your baby’s ribs is pulled tight while breathing.
    • the baby's chest gets bigger.
    • your baby's color changes from normal to pale or red in the face, fingernails blue.
    • his/her cry becomes softer and shorter.
    • his/her nostrils open wider.
    • he/she is grunting during feeding.
  • DO NOT do these things if your baby is having asthma symptoms:
    • DO NOT give your baby a lot of liquid to drink – normal amounts are okay.
    • DO NOT have your baby breathe warm, moist air (like the mist from a hot shower or vaporizer).
    • DO NOT have your baby rebreathe into a bag held tightly over her nose and mouth.
    • DO NOT give your baby over-the-counter medicines. Use only medicines the doctor has directed you to give for asthma.

    • Adapted from the Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma, National Asthma Education and Prevention Program of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, 1997.

Learn more about the other groups involved in bringing this website to you:
American Lung Association of Michigan

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This page last updated on April 3, 2009