Conceptual Overview
The Pediatric Assessment Triangle (PAT) is a rapid, hands-off observational tool developed to give clinicians an immediate general impression of a child's physiologic status within the first 30 seconds of an encounter - before a single piece of equipment touches the patient.
The PAT evaluates three components simultaneously:
- Appearance (A): The child's mental status and muscle tone - the most important indicator of overall brain perfusion, oxygenation, and CNS function
- Work of Breathing (B): Visible signs of respiratory effort that indicate the degree of respiratory compromise
- Circulation to Skin (C): Skin color and perfusion that reflect cardiovascular adequacy
Together, these three components form the "triangle" and allow you to categorize the child's physiologic state before vital signs, monitors, or even a stethoscope. This is deliberate - pediatric patients, especially infants and toddlers, become more agitated and harder to assess once you start touching them.
Appearance (the "Tickles" Mnemonic)
Appearance is the most important component of the PAT. It reflects the adequacy of ventilation, oxygenation, brain perfusion, and CNS function all at once. An abnormal appearance is the most sensitive indicator that a child is seriously ill or injured.
Use the "TICKLES" mnemonic (or the classic "TICLS") to systematically evaluate appearance:
| Letter | Component | Normal | Abnormal |
|---|---|---|---|
| T | Tone | Moving spontaneously, resists exam | Limp, floppy, motionless |
| I | Interactiveness | Alert, reaches for objects, plays | Uninterested, no engagement with environment |
| C | Consolability | Stops crying with caregiver comfort | Inconsolable, or paradoxically quiet (worse) |
| K/L | Look / Gaze | Makes eye contact, tracks faces | Glassy-eyed, vacant stare, doesn't fix on faces |
| E | Speech / Cry | Strong cry, age-appropriate speech | Weak/high-pitched cry, hoarse, muffled, or silent |
| S | Smile | Interactive, responds socially | No social response, flat affect |
Work of Breathing
The second component evaluates visible respiratory effort from across the room. You're assessing effort, not adequacy - a child can have increased work of breathing and still be adequately oxygenating, or have minimal work of breathing and be in respiratory failure (an ominous sign).
Visual Signs of Increased Work of Breathing
- Nasal flaring: Dilation of nostrils with each breath - reduces airway resistance (common in infants)
- Retractions: Suprasternal, intercostal, subcostal, or substernal - reflects the use of accessory muscles to generate negative intrathoracic pressure. The more locations of retractions, the more severe the distress
- Head bobbing: Head extension on inspiration and flexion on expiration - uses sternocleidomastoid as accessory muscle (primarily in infants)
- Tripoding / Sniffing position: Child sits upright, leans forward, extends neck - maximizing airway diameter
- Seesaw / paradoxical breathing: Abdomen rises while chest falls (or vice versa) - indicates severe respiratory distress with diaphragmatic fatigue
Audible Signs (Heard Without Stethoscope)
- Stridor: Harsh, high-pitched inspiratory sound → upper airway obstruction (croup, foreign body, epiglottitis)
- Wheezing: Musical expiratory sound → lower airway obstruction (asthma, bronchiolitis)
- Grunting: Short, low-pitched expiratory sound → the child is generating auto-PEEP by vocalizing against a partially closed glottis. This is a sign of significant respiratory distress and often indicates alveolar disease (pneumonia, pulmonary edema)
- Snoring / gurgling: Indicates upper airway obstruction from soft tissue or secretions
Circulation to Skin
The third PAT component assesses cardiovascular adequacy through visible skin signs. When cardiac output drops, the body shunts blood away from the skin to preserve perfusion to vital organs - making skin changes an early and visible indicator of circulatory compromise.
What to Look For
- Pallor: Pale skin or mucous membranes → vasoconstriction from shock, anemia, or hypothermia
- Mottling: Irregular, patchy areas of pale and dusky skin → uneven perfusion suggesting significant circulatory compromise
- Cyanosis: Bluish discoloration:
- Peripheral (acrocyanosis): Hands and feet only - common in newborns, can be normal in cold environments
- Central cyanosis: Lips, tongue, trunk - always abnormal, indicates significant hypoxemia (requires ~5g/dL deoxyhemoglobin)
Putting the Triangle Together
The real power of the PAT is combining the three components to generate a general impression that categorizes the child's physiologic state and guides your initial management approach.
| Appearance | Breathing | Circulation | General Impression | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | Normal | Normal | Stable | Well-appearing child, minor complaint |
| Normal | Abnormal | Normal | Respiratory distress | Asthma exacerbation with wheezing, alert child |
| Abnormal | Abnormal | Normal | Respiratory failure | Altered child + labored breathing or ominously quiet breathing |
| Normal | Normal | Abnormal | Compensated shock | Pale/mottled skin, alert child, normal breathing |
| Abnormal | Normal | Abnormal | Decompensated shock | Altered + pale/mottled, breathing may be normal or tachypneic |
| Abnormal | Normal | Normal | CNS / metabolic dysfunction | Seizure, ingestion, hypoglycemia, meningitis, head injury |
| Abnormal | Abnormal | Abnormal | Cardiopulmonary failure / imminent arrest | All three components abnormal = life-threatening emergency |
From PAT to Primary Assessment
The PAT takes 30 seconds and generates a general impression. The primary assessment follows immediately - this is where you get hands-on and gather objective data to refine your impression.
ABCDE Approach (After PAT)
- A - Airway: Is the airway patent? Maintainable? Unmaintainable? Assess for secretions, positioning, audible sounds
- B - Breathing: Respiratory rate, SpO2, lung sounds, chest expansion, ETCO2 if available
- C - Circulation: Heart rate, blood pressure, capillary refill, skin temperature, pulse quality (central vs. peripheral)
- D - Disability: AVPU or GCS, pupils, blood glucose, posturing
- E - Exposure: Undress the child. Look for rashes (petechiae/purpura = meningococcemia), bruising (NAT?), deformities, temperature
Quick Reference
- PAT duration: ~30 seconds, hands-off, across the room
- Three components: Appearance, Work of Breathing, Circulation to Skin
- Appearance (TICLS/TICKLES): Tone, Interactiveness, Consolability, Look/gaze, Cry/Speech, Smile
- Most important component: Appearance - reflects overall CNS and perfusion
- Abnormal A + Normal B + Normal C: CNS/metabolic problem (check glucose, consider seizure, ingestion)
- Normal A + Abnormal B: Respiratory distress (still compensating)
- Abnormal A + Abnormal B: Respiratory failure (decompensating)
- Abnormal C with Normal A: Compensated shock
- Abnormal A + Abnormal C: Decompensated shock
- All three abnormal: Cardiopulmonary failure - treat as imminent arrest
- Grunting: Auto-PEEP = significant distress, needs immediate intervention
- Quiet child with history of distress: Suspect respiratory failure, not improvement
Clinical Pearls
References
- Dieckmann RA, Brownstein D, Gausche-Hill M. The Pediatric Assessment Triangle: a novel approach for the rapid evaluation of children. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2010;26(4):312-315.
- American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Emergency Physicians. APLS: The Pediatric Emergency Medicine Resource. 6th ed. Jones & Bartlett Learning; 2020.
- Ralston M, Hazinski MF, Zaritsky AL, et al. Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) Provider Manual. American Heart Association; 2020.
- NAEMT. PHTLS: Prehospital Trauma Life Support. 10th ed. Jones & Bartlett Learning; 2023.
- Horeczko T, Enriquez B, McGrath NE, et al. The Pediatric Assessment Triangle: accuracy of its applied use in a pediatric emergency department. J Emerg Med. 2013;44(2):453-457.
Medical Disclaimer
- For Educational Purposes Only: This content is intended for educational reference and should not be used for clinical decision-making.
- Not a Substitute for Professional Judgment: Always consult your local protocols, institutional guidelines, and supervising physicians.
- Verify Before Acting: Users are responsible for verifying information through authoritative sources before any clinical application.