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Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis

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Title: Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis


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Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis
  • DR KAZEMI
  • Alzahra hospital
  • pediatric
  • kmazemi_at_med.mui.ac.ir.com
  • 1382

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Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis
  • Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (IHPS) is
    a condition of hypertrophy of the pylorus, with
    elongation

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Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis
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etiology
  • 3 in 1,000 live births
  • more commonly in males
  • 30 percent of cases occur in firstborn
  • genetic predisposition
  • environmental factors
  • Neonatal hypergastrinemia and gastric
    hyperacidity may have a role

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etiology
  • An association between IHPS and the
    administration of oral erythromycin given for
    postexposure prophylaxis for pertussis has been
    described 11-14.

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CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
  • The classic presentation of IHPS is the three- to
    six-week-old baby who develops immediate
    postprandial, non-bilious, often projectile
    VOMITING and demands to be re-fed soon afterwards
  • (a "hungry vomiter").

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CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
  • In another review of infants diagnosed between
    1957 to 1969, the mean age in which the infants
    began
  • vomiting was 22 days 15

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CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
  • olive" typically was quite high
  • (up to 92 percent) in a report from 1975, but is
    less common in more recent reports 4,5. The
    "olive" is most easily felt immediately after
    emesis because it may otherwise be obscured by a
    distended antrum and/or tensed abdominal muscles

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CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
  • Peristaltic waves may be seen progressing across
    the child's upper abdomen from left to right just
    before emesis.

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Laboratory evaluation
  • hypochloremic, metabolic alkalosis
  • loss of large amounts of gastric hydrochloric
    acid
  • hypokalemia typically is not seen early on but is
    quite common in babies who have been vomiting for
    longer than three weeks

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Clinical associations
  • One of the most common associations is an
    unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia
  • concomitant alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency

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Clinical associations
  • Midgut malrotation has been described in up to 5
    percent
  • An association with malrotation, congenital short
    bowel, and IHPS also has been reported but is
    much less common

14
Clinical associations
  • An absent or hypoplastic mandibular frenulum, as
    well as joint hypermobility, has been observed

15
Clinical associations
  • eosinophilic gastroenteritis 28, gastric ulcer
    29, hiatal hernia 30, diaphragmatic hernia
    31, congenital heart disease 32, propionic
    acidemia 33, congenital nephrotic syndrome
    34, and congenital hypothyroidism 35. At
    least one case of congenital pyloric stenosis has
    been diagnosed in an infant with an intrauterine
    history of polyhydramnios 36.

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Clinical associations
  • A clinical picture of IHPS was described in a
    one-month-old infant with familial hyperlipidemia
    who had an intense hyperechogenicity of the
    thickened pyloric muscle on ultrasound and fatty
    infiltration of the pyloric muscle layer at
    surgical exploration 37. The symptoms resolved
    after implementation of a fat-restricted diet.

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DIAGNOSIS
  • "olive" is palpable
  • ultrasound or upper gastrointestinal (UGI)
    contrast study 10,38
  • pyloric muscle length (PML), and pyloric diameter
    (PD). Published criteria have ranged from 3 to 4
    mm for PMT, 15 to 19 mm for PML, and 10 to 14 mm
    for PD 39-41.

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Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis
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Barium studies

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An upper GI series reveals a point of obstrution
at the fourth part of the duodenum
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An upper GI series demonstrates malposition
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surgical
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Ultrasound upprr gi
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Upper endoscopy
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DIAGNOSIS
  • gastric volume and serum acid-base
    determinations. In one study, IHPS was present in
    nearly 92 percent of infants with a nasogastric
    aspirate of 10 mL or more after three to four
    hours of fasting 55.

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DIAGNOSIS
  • GER was diagnosed in nearly 86 percent of those
    with aspirates of less than 10 mL. Another study
    showed that serum pH gt7.45, chloride gt98, and
    base excess gt3 gave a positive predictive value
    of 88 percent in diagnosing IHPS in infants
    presenting with vomiting 56.

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TREATMENT
  • Oral and intravenous atropine sulfate (which
    relaxes the pyloric musculature) also have been
    described but are uncommonly used 58,59.
    Because of the safety and efficacy of surgery,
    conservative management should be reserved for
    infants in whom a surgical approach is either not
    advisable or feasible.

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TREATMENT
  • The timing of surgery depends upon the clinical
    status of the infant. If the diagnosis is made
    early and the child is well-hydrated with normal
    electrolytes, surgery may take place on the day
    of diagnosis 60. Surgery should be delayed in
    the setting of dehydration and/or electrolyte
    derangements 61

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TREATMENT
  • . Infants with moderate or severe dehydration
    require more involved fluid percent management
    with higher NaCl concentrations (0.5 to normal
    saline) and higher rates of administration (1.5
    to 2 times maintenance), perhaps combined with
    bolus administration initially.

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TREATMENT
  • The correction of alkalosis prior to surgery is
    imperative because alkalosis has been associated
    with an increased risk of post-operative apnea
    62.

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TREATMENT
  • Caution must be taken in the more severely
    dehydrated infants to ensure the kidneys are
    functional prior to the addition of KCl to the
    intravenous fluids. The correction of alkalosis
    prior to surgery is imperative because alkalosis
    has been associated with an increased risk of
    post-operative

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TREATMENT
  • Endoscopically-guided balloon dilation for IHPS
    has been described

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TREATMENT
  • An earlier study cited its most frequent
    complications as GER (11 percent), duodenal
    perforation (8 percent), and wound infection (5
    percent) 70. The incidence of wound dehiscence
    and bleeding is very low 71.

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TREATMENT
  • regurgitation can be as high as nearly 80 percent
    5, and its presence should not delay the
    institution of post-operative feedings.

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