Most children with cough do not have interstitial lung disease. It becomes a consideration when symptoms, oxygen, growth and imaging do not fit common patterns.
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.
- Persistent fast breathing or low oxygen
- Poor growth or exercise limitation
- Crackles or clubbing noted by doctor
- Unusual CT or X-ray findings
Common reasons doctors think about.
- Genetic surfactant disorders in some children
- Immune/inflammatory lung disease
- Post-infectious or environmental causes in selected cases
What a pediatric pulmonologist checks.
- Detailed history and examination
- High-resolution CT when justified
- Oxygen assessment and lung function when possible
- Specialist multidisciplinary evaluation
What not to do blindly.
- Do not panic from one abnormal X-ray word
- Do not delay review if oxygen is low or symptoms are progressive
- Do not treat rare lung disease without specialist diagnosis
- Do not ignore poor growth and chronic respiratory signs
Related guides.
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