Chart — Neonatal
Neonatal Respiratory Distress Comparison
Grunting, flaring, and retractions tell you a newborn is in trouble — the history tells you why. The four most-tested causes of neonatal respiratory distress, compared by the features that separate them.
Educational use only. Newborn respiratory distress is escalated immediately and managed under provider and NICU direction. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Cause Comparison
| Feature | TTN | RDS | Meconium Aspiration | Neonatal Sepsis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Typical infant | Term or late preterm; often cesarean without labor | Preterm — surfactant deficiency | Term or post-term with meconium-stained fluid | Any infant; risk with maternal fever, GBS, prolonged ROM |
| Onset | Within first 2 hours of birth | At birth or within minutes to hours, progressive | At or shortly after birth | Hours to days; may be subtle first |
| Hallmark | Tachypnea (often over 100/min) with mild distress | Worsening grunting, retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis | Barrel chest, coarse crackles; meconium staining of skin and cord | Temperature instability, lethargy, poor feeding, apnea plus distress |
| Course | Self-limiting — resolves within 24–72 hours | Worsens over first 48–72 hours without surfactant support | Variable — risk of air leak and persistent pulmonary hypertension | Deteriorates without antibiotics — can progress to shock |
| Nursing priority | Support oxygenation, hold oral feeds if tachypneic, reassure parents | Anticipate CPAP or surfactant; minimal handling; thermoregulation | Anticipate resuscitation team at delivery; monitor for PPHN | Recognize subtle signs early; cultures then antibiotics per orders |
TTN = transient tachypnea of the newborn · RDS = respiratory distress syndrome · PPHN = persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn
Recognizing Distress in Any Newborn
The classic triad
Grunting (auto-PEEP against a closing glottis), nasal flaring, and retractions — substernal, intercostal, or supraclavicular. Add tachypnea over 60/min and central cyanosis.
Grunting is never normal
An audible expiratory grunt is the newborn physically holding alveoli open. Persistent grunting past the first minutes of transition is escalated, not observed.
Count a full minute
Newborn breathing is irregular with normal pauses up to 10 seconds. Periodic breathing is normal; apnea over 20 seconds (or shorter with color or tone change) is not.
NCLEX Pearls
- ✦Respiratory rate over 60 at rest, grunting, flaring, or retractions = respiratory distress — escalate.
- ✦TTN is the classic “wet lung” after cesarean birth without labor; it resolves, but other causes must be ruled out.
- ✦RDS belongs to the preterm infant: surfactant deficiency makes alveoli collapse with every breath.
- ✦Hold oral feedings in a tachypneic newborn — aspiration risk; nutrition per provider plan.
- ✦Sepsis can look like “just not feeding well” — temperature instability plus respiratory signs is sepsis until proven otherwise.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) · Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) · AWHONN. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
