Pertussis is a respiratory infection caused by bacteria called Bordetella pertussis. It is also called whooping cough because of the characteristic sound of the cough it causes.
The illness usually begins with a runny nose, mild cough, and pink eyes that last about a week. Then an increasingly severe cough develops that can last 2 to 4 weeks. The cough usually comes in spasms and ends with a high-pitched whoop. Often the coughing causes a child to vomit or his or her face to turn red or blue. During the coughing phase, children with whooping cough do not have a fever. In infants, whooping cough is a very serious illness and may require them to be hospitalized.
Your child's antibiotic is ____________________________. Your child's dose is ___________ given ______ times a day during waking hours for ______ days.
Warm apple juice or tea may help break the coughing spasms and is soothing to your child. A humidifier in your child's room may also help. (The humidifier must be cleaned every 2 to 3 days.) Gentle suction with a bulb syringe and saline water may be used to get rid of thick secretions in the nose and throat.
Encourage your child to drink lots of clear fluids to prevent the mucus in the lungs from becoming sticky and loosen the mucous in the nose and throat. Fluids also help your child clear secretions and breathe easier.
Keep your children away from things that trigger coughing, such as tobacco smoke, perfumes, or pollutants.
All people in close contact with your child will be asked to take an antibiotic to prevent them from getting sick or passing it to other people. This includes people in your immediate household and any day care contacts your child may have.
It is important to have your child immunized against all preventable illnesses, including whooping cough, at their regularly scheduled health checkups.
Some parents have concerns about the neurologic side effects of the old pertussis vaccine. It must be remembered that pertussis is a dangerous disease, especially for infants. Complications can include pneumonia, seizures and death. A newer vaccine for pertussis is now being used and the risk of a serious reaction is less than with the previous vaccine. The risk of having neurologic problems or long term damage from the current vaccine is very low.
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