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Pediatric GI complaints

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Pediatric GI complaints * * * * You are working as the Monday morning drop (kick) doc. After 3 consecutive cases of low back pain you are excited to see a newborn on ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pediatric GI complaints


1
Pediatric GI complaints
2
Case 1
3
Case 1
  • 4 month-old infant presents for visit c/o
    frequent crying episodes lasting 3 hours at a
    time
  • Ongoing for 4 weeks and occurs 5 days per week.
  • Often starts in the afternoon, face turns red,
    fists clench, pulls knees to chest.
  • Tried switching to say formula and simethicone
    neither helped at all.

4
Case 1
  • Parents are both radiologists
  • Birth history is NSVD
  • Eating about 3oz formula 8x/day (24 ounces)
  • No fevers, rashes, vomiting, or colds
  • Seems like he needs to poop, but stool is soft

5
Case 1 (exam)
  • Afebrile, P140, RR30,
  • Following 50 wt/age growth curve
  • Lungs CTA, heart RRR, abd BS, soft, no masses
  • GU nl male, circumcised

6
Case 1
  • What is the most likely diagnosis?
  • What one piece of information is inconsistent
    with the diagnosis?

7
Infantile Colic
  • Crying in an otherwise healthy infant
    gt3hours/day gt3days/week x gt 3 weeks
  • Starts around 2 weeks, peaks at 6 weeks and ends
    by 4 months
  • Incidence 12-20 (80 of parents report their
    child had colic)
  • Afebrile and normal PE. Screen for weight loss.
  • Weak evidence to screen for UTI in infants with
    prolonged crying, no other studies indicated

8
Infantile Colic
  • Treatment is reassurance for parents.
  • Almost always resolves by 3 months
  • Avoid changing formulas as this may impart the
    perception that infant is allergic or ill in
    some way.
  • Consider hospitalization in cases where crying is
    so intractable infant is at risk for abuse.

9
Case2 the 4 Month WCC
  • At the 4 month WCC your medical student says she
    is concerned.
  • Patient has known trisomy 21 and is falling off
    Downs growth curve
  • Had a recent cold
  • Taking about 15 ounces of formula/ day
  • Sleeping about 10 hours every night
  • Wet diaper about every 3-4 hours
  • Responds normally to sound

10
Case2 the 4 month WCC
  • Mom reports decreased PO with fat belly
  • BM once per 5 days and she sometimes has to use
    her finger to get stool out
  • Epic reveals 5 BMs in the first 72 hours of life
  • Vitals afebrile, RR 36, P 110
  • slightly distended abdomen, non-tender, tympanic
  • Anus appears normal

11
Case2 the 4 month WCC
  • Whats the most likely diagnosis?
  • What part of the story is inconsistent with that
    diagnosis?

12
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13
Hirschsprungs disease (Congenital Megacolon)
  • absence of ganglion cells in all or part of the
    colon (colon unable to relax)
  • 90 of infants with Hirschsprungs fail to pass
    meconium in the first 24 hours of life.
  • 80 of patients present in the first 3 months of
    life with
  • Difficult BMs, poor feeding and progressive
    abdominal distention
  • Disease can go undiagnosed for years.

14
Hirschsprungs disease (Congenital Megacolon)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Hirschsprungs disease (Congenital Megacolon)
  • Major complication (25) enterocolitis (fever,
    foul-smelling diarrhea significant mortality)
  • Diagnosis AXR? barium enema
  • Confirmation rectal biopsy
  • Treatment colectomy
  • http//www.aafp.org/afp/20061015/1319.html
    (accessed 10/29/09)

17
Case 3 -- Hx
  • 28yo G1P1 Mom brings her boy for evaluation to
    your clinic in Sitka, AK
  • CC vomiting
  • 4 weeks old
  • Describes vomiting after almost every feeding of
    breastmilk. Some spitting up began at 2 weeks,
    but now occurs almost every time.
  • Seems hungry and crying all the time

18
Case 3 vomit comet
19
Case 3
  • No coughing, fever or chills
  • Tummy is gurgling a lot
  • No diarrhea
  • FmHX Mom has scar on abdomen from some surgery
    when she was an infant.

20
Case 3 -- PE
  • Afebrile, P 160, RR 24
  • Weight up 2 from birth weight
  • Infant irritable and crying in Moms arms
  • Cor rrr, pul CTA abd hyperactive BS
  • You observe a feeding Vigorous feeder, but 5
    minutes post feed you observe projectile vomiting
    that that is a bright green color.

21
Case 2
  • Quite confident in your diagnosis you order an
    ultrasound that shows the following

22
Case 2 --
  • What is the most likely diagnosis?
  • What one piece of the presentation is
    inconsistent with this diagnosis?

23
Case 2 bonus questions
  • Since a storm is coming in, you call your
    surgical consult in Seattle to see about
    medically evacuating the infant. (Sitka does not
    have a pediatric surgeon)
  • What test or study did the pediatric surgeon want
    that changed the management plan?

24
Case 2 --
  • Lets see what the lytes show!
  • NA 136 (low normal) K 3.4 (slightly low)
  • Cl 90 (low) HCO3 36(elevated)
  • Cr 0.8 (normal) BUN 12 (normal)
  • WHAT metabolic abnormality do these labs suggest?

25
Pyloric Stenosis
  • Occurs in 2-4/1000 births
  • More common in white children, first born and
    those with MATERNAL family history
  • Doesnt begin until 2-8 weeks of age
  • NON-BILLIOUS forceful or projectile vomiting
    gradually worsens

26
Pyloric Stenosis
  • Hypertrophic Pyloric Valve can be felt in the
    RUQ in about 50 of cases.
  • Feels like an olive
  • These cases proceed to surgery directly
  • Ultrasound is nearly 100 sensitive and specific
    in skilled hands and it is the imagining study of
    choice where available.

27
Pyloric Stenosis is a Medical EMERGENCY!
28
Pyloric Stenosis is a Medical EMERGENCY!
29
Case 4
  • 18 month-old male
  • Previously healthy
  • Presenting with colicky abdominal pain
  • H/o crying and bringing knees to chest
  • But he appears normal on your initial exam
  • Afebrile. RR 28, P130
  • DO YOU THINK THIS IS COLIC?

30
Case 4
  • NO!!!!
  • Can you name 2 reasons why its unlikely?
  • Age gt3 months
  • Acute rather than subacute presentation

31
Case 4
  • Phone interpreter on line No ill contacts
  • Vomiting this morning x 3
  • Light brown diarrhea x 2
  • Still peeing normal amount but decreased appetite
  • Exam reveals no sign of dehydration, clear lungs
    and normal heart, slightly distended abdomen and
    hyperactive BS
  • What next?

32
Case 3
  • Send home with good warning signs?
  • Frequent vomiting, dehydration, lethargy, high
    fever, bloody stools and bilious vomiting
  • Admit to hospital?

33
Case 3
  • PO challenge?
  • Watched him drink and he soon started screaming
  • Now refusing all PO
  • RN reports more vomiting and loose BM she
    checked both for blood and they were both
    negative
  • More careful exam reveals a mass located in the
    right side of the abdomen
  • Preceptor suggested a contrast enema and
    admission to the hospital for observation
  • Your preceptor looks sort of excited, closes his
    facebook account, and asks, So, what do you
    think might be going on?

34
Case 3
  • What is the most likely diagnosis?
  • What one aspect of the case is inconsistent with
    the diagnosis?

35
Intussusception
  • Telescoping of bowel that causes progressive
    edema and ischemia
  • 1-4/1000 infants (boysgt girls)
  • Occurs from 3 months to 3 years (peak 9 months)
  • History
  • 20 minute cycles of intermittent pain,
  • vomiting
  • Heme positive stools (95 of the time.)

36
Intussusception
  • Currant Jelly stool
  • (mix of mucus and blood)
  • seen in 16-60 of cases.

37
Intussusception
  • Exam
  • may present w/ sausage-shaped RUQ mass

38
Intussusception - treatment
  • Contrast enema are 95 diagnostic
  • 60-80 therapeutic
  • CI peritonitis, suspected perforation, shock

39
Intussusception - treatment
  • Surgery indicated when
  • Suspected performation
  • Necrotic bowel
  • Post reduction U/S or contrast study shows
    persistent filling defect

40
Intussusception - treatment
  • Ultrasound is becoming more widely used to
    diagnose and guide reduction
  • 100 sensitive in skilled hands
  • CT scan not recommended

41
Intussusception -- Barium enema?
  • Thought to increase risk of perforation
  • so most use other contrast material or air.
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