Growth Abnormalities - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Growth Abnormalities

Description:

Generally refers to infants and young children whose weight is between the 3rd ... Kwashiorkor- significant protein deprivation may lead to insults like infection, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:105
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: rache69
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Growth Abnormalities


1
Growth Abnormalities
  • Deviations in Physical Growth
  • Debbie King
  • 8805

2
Failure-to-Thrive (FTT)
  • Definition
  • No consensus on definition
  • Descriptive rather than diagnostic term
  • Generally refers to infants and young children
    whose weight is between the 3rd percentile on
    National Center for Health Statistics growth
    standards and/or whose weight trajectory has
    decreased by two major growth percentiles
  • Traditional categories include organic FTT,
    nonorganic FTT, and mixed etiology FTT
  • Newer categories include neurodevelopment FTT and
    social-emotional FTT

3
FTT
  • Etiology/ Incidence
  • Multifactorial etiology including underlying
    organic disease or predisposing medical
    condition, maladaptive parent-infant interaction,
    maternal depression, poverty, deficits in parent
    information and skills, child abuse and neglect
  • Accounts for between 3 and 5 of all pediatric
    admission of all infants less than one year
  • Male and females are equally affected

4
FTT
  • Clinical Findings
  • Inadequate intake
  • Increased losses or decreased utilization
  • Increases caloric requirements
  • Altered growth potential
  • Terms
  • Wasting acute loss of weight or failure to gain
    at the expected rate or weight loss
  • Stunting- reduction in height for age
  • Marasmus- head circumference growth slow
  • Kwashiorkor- significant protein deprivation may
    lead to insults like infection, may produce
    edematous malnutrition

5
FTT
  • Differential Diagnosis
  • Organic causes
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Cardiopulmonary
  • Endocrine
  • Infection
  • Neurologic

6
FTT
  • Social-emotional and environmental causes
  • Maternal depression, isolation, marital
    difficulties
  • Poverty/inadequate resources
  • Inadequate resources
  • Inadequate parenting knowledge and skills
  • Difficult temperament
  • Child abuse and neglect

7
FTT
  • Diagnostic Methods/Findings
  • History
  • Identification of risk factors
  • Height, weight, head circumference review
    longitudinal growth data, corrected for gestation
    age as appropriate
  • Physical examination
  • Feeding observation
  • Home visit or public health nurse referral
  • Laboratory assessment should be judicious based
    on history and clinical findings
  • See FTT workup handout!!

8
FTT
  • Management/Treatment
  • Importance of developing therapeutic alliance
    with caregiver
  • Usually managed on outpatient basis
  • Interdisciplinary approach is optimal utilizing
    health care, nutritional, mental health and
    social service
  • Provide caregivers with necessary information
    regarding nutritional needs of child and
    appropriate feeding skills to promote optimal
    growth
  • Decrease fluid intake and increase solids!
  • Close monitoring and follow-up on growth and
    development, social environment and
    interdisciplinary/ interagency communication
  • May need referral to GI

9
Obesity
  • Excess accumulation of body fat relative to lean
    body mass that results from excessive caloric
    intake relative to energy expenditure
  • Operational definitions vary in literature
  • Operational definitions of obesity in adults are
    derived from statistical data analyzing the
    association between body mass and the risk of
    acute and long-term morbidity and mortality

10
Obesity
  • Etiology/ Incidence
  • Multifactorial etiology
  • Genetic predisposition and parental obesity(new
    studies very interesting)
  • Dietary patterns
  • Inactivity
  • Cultural and familial food preferences
  • Use of food as emotional buffer
  • Physical disorders with decreased energy
    expenditure most prevalent nutritional problem in
    U.S.
  • Childhood obesity prevalence is rising with
    current estimates 40 are overweight or obese
    depending on definition and cut-off values

11
Obesity
  • Clinical Findings
  • Parent and/or child concern regarding body weight
  • Clinical observation of large size and/or excess
    fat on child
  • NOTE- obese children become obese adults
  • Childhood obesity predisposes to insulin
    resistance and type 2 diabetes, hypertension,
    hyperlipidemia, liver and renal disease, and
    reproductive dysfunction.
  •  It also increases the risk of adult obesity and
    cardiovascular disease.

12
Obesity
  • Differential diagnosis
  • Endocrine dysfunction
  • Congenital disorders/short stature
  • Large frame
  • Muscular hypertrophy
  • Medication induced obesity

13
Obesity
  • Diagnostic Tests/Findings
  • History includes detailed dietary and activity
    level history, family history
  • Physical examination, vital signs, blood pressure
  • Anthropometric measurements
  • Weight for height ration greater than 95th
    percentile on NCHS growth charts is commonly used
  • Percent of ideal body weight greater or equal to
    120
  • Skin fold thickness
  • Body Mass Index- considered most useful(?)
  • New NHANES III growth chart reference standards
    recently released

14
Obesity
  • Management/ Treatment
  • Prevention in infancy through parent education
    regarding nutritional needs and feeding
    strategies
  • Discuss moderate modification of diet and caloric
    content while increasing exercise program
    (moderate exercise 3 times a week just as
    effective as heavy workout more freq)
  • Goal for younger children is weight maintenance
  • Occasionally weight loss

15
Obesity
  • Behavior modification strategies directed at
    alternative coping measures to deal with stress,
    maintain motivation and reinforce regimen of
    success
  • Involvement of family in therapeutic program
    increases likelihood of success
  • Refer to collaborate with available community
    resources as appropriate
  • http//www.medscape.com/viewarticle/701809?srcmp
    spon24uac134690DK
  • Watch this prior to class and be ready for
    discussion

16
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Chronic and often severe disturbance in eating
    behavior accompanied by distorted perception of
    body weight, size and shape
  • Anorexia Nervosa- eating disturbance associated
    with weight loss and refusal to maintain body
    weight at minimally normal level with subsequent
    amenorrhea
  • Bulimia Nervosa- eating disturbance associated
    with episodic binge eating followed by
    compensatory efforts to prevent weight gain
  • Anorexia may occur with or without binging
    bulimia may occur with or without purging

17
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Etiology/ Incidence
  • Family enmeshment hypothesis
  • Fear of sexual maturation
  • Social pressure to be thin
  • Ballet dancers and gymnasts at particular risk
  • Associated with psychological profile of low
    self-esteem in spite of outward successfulness
  • Both disorders are more common in females

18
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Anorexia affects approximately 1 of white
    middle/upper class females
  • Bimodal distribution with one peak at 14 years
    and second at 18 years
  • Bulimia is more common than anorexia with later
    age onset
  • Suicide rates of 2 to 5 of those with chronic
    anorexia with all mortality as high as 10
  • Normal to high intelligence, overachievers,
    perfectionists

19
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Clinical Findings
  • Self-imposed weight loss
  • Anemia, jaundice and secondary amenorrhea
  • Vigorous exercise regimen to increase weight loss
  • Constipation and reflux esophagitis
  • Dry skin, brittle nails
  • Lower body temperature, blood pressure and heart
    rate
  • Sore throat, calluses on dorsum of fingers, loss
    of tooth enamel

20
  • Screening questions
  • How do you feel about your body
  • Are there parts of your body you would like to
    change
  • Do you see yourself as overweight, underweight or
    satisfactory
  • If satisfactory has there been a time when you
    did not
  • If overweight how would you change
  • Have you ever been on a diet
  • What have done to help yourself loose weight
  • Do you count calories or fat grams
  • Do you deep your intake to a certain number
  • Have you ever used supplements or diet pills or
    laxatives
  • Have you ever made yourself vomit

21
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Differential Diagnosis
  • General medical condition
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
  • Diabetes
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Malignancy
  • Pregnancy
  • Depressive disorder
  • Substance abuse

22
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Diagnostic Tests/ Findings
  • History
  • Weight and height percentiles
  • Mild- lt20 below IBM (ideal body weight)
  • Moderate- 20 to 30 below IBW
  • Severe- gt30 below IBM
  • Physical exam
  • CBC, serum albumin, glucose, electrolytes,
    thyroid function, ECG

23
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Diagnostic criteria
  • Refusal to maintain body weight
  • Intense fear of gaining weight
  • Disturbance in the way ones own body shape
  • In postmenarchal females amenorrhea for at least
    three cycles

24
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Management/ Treatment
  • Interdisciplinary treatment plan
  • Hospitalization for rehydration and re-feeding if
    condition warrants
  • Refer to appropriate community resources for
    assessment tool, support, and education
  • 25 poor outcomes regardless of intervention
  • Very frustrating to treat!!

25
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Complications
  • Early satiety
  • Superior mesenteric artery syndrome
  • Malnourished
  • Constipation
  • Osteoporosis- 50
  • Mortality
  • Cardiac
  • Endocrine
  • Metabolic
  • Anemia
  • Dehydration
  • Acidosis, ect.
  • Neurological
  • Renal
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com