Do Symptoms Get Worse for Kids at Night?

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Why is that your 2-year-old’s fever, congestion and pain suddenly worsen at nightfall when the pediatrician’s office is closed?

Is it simply a matter of your weary child noticing her symptoms while lying quietly in bed? Maybe. But there are also real changes occurring late in the evening and during sleep which may contribute to increased severity in symptoms of an illness.

Emotions

At bedtime, your sick child’s anxiety may grow simply because of the dark or imagined monsters under the bed. Isolation and silence at nighttime may also contribute to how little ones perceive their discomfort.

 

Physical Changes

During sleep, a child’s symptoms may grow more severe. For example, with an ear infection, lying down is painful because of the increase in the collection of fluid in the ear canal (which places pressure on inflamed ear tissue). This explains earaches (and crying!) flaring in the middle of the night. Also, fever burns in the evening, and prevalent health conditions such as asthma worsen at night.

 

Asthma affects 20 million Americans and involves a narrowing and clogging of the bronchi tubes in the lungs. At night, bronchi narrow in everyone, increasing resistance to air flow. Not a problem for kids without asthma, but in asthmatics such constriction at night may bring on an attack.

 

Allergens in Bedroom

Unfortunately the air children breathe at night in their rooms may host common allergens including pet dander and dust mites which can set off a reaction.

 

Comfort Ideas for Nighttime

In addition to entering your pediatrician’s number in your speed dial, it may be possible to ease your child’s symptoms and discomfort at night by keeping these items close at hand.

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