Chronic lung disease of prematurity is not just a NICU label. It can affect feeding, growth, infections, oxygen need and later wheeze.
Severe breathing difficulty, chest indrawing, blue lips, drowsiness, poor feeding, grunting, pauses in breathing, persistent fast breathing, low oxygen — these are not for online review. Go to in-person pediatric emergency care.
What parents usually notice.
- History of prematurity, ventilation or oxygen in NICU
- Ongoing oxygen, noisy breathing or recurrent wheeze
- Poor weight gain or feeding fatigue
- Frequent hospital visits with viral infections
Common reasons doctors think about.
- Bronchopulmonary dysplasia/chronic lung disease
- Airway malacia or aspiration in selected children
- Pulmonary hypertension risk in some infants
- Viral infection vulnerability
What a pediatric pulmonologist checks.
- Corrected age and growth
- Oxygen saturation trends and feeding tolerance
- Vaccination/prevention plan
- Need for pulmonology, cardiology or nutrition support
What not to do blindly.
- Do not compare a premature baby directly with term babies
- Do not stop oxygen without medical plan
- Do not ignore feeding fatigue or blue episodes
- Do not delay care during fast breathing illness
Related guides.
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