26: 9-week-old male not gaining weight Flashcards
Weight Gain in the Newborn
- -Immediately after birth, most newborn infants lose some weight, but it uncommonly exceeds 10% of birth weight.
- -Healthy infants born at full term will gain an average of 20-30 grams per day during the first 4 months of life. Weight doubles by approximately 4 months for the average infant, although some infants reach this weight by 3 months.
- -About half of the weight gained during the first 4 months of life is in the form of fat, making the 4-month-old infant the fattest healthy human, with about 25-26% of weight as fat.
- -Formula-fed infants tend to gain weight faster than do breastfed infants because they ingest more calories.
Failure to Thrive (FTT)
- -Weight falls below the 3rd percentile
- -Weight for height/length falls below the 3rd percentile
- -The rate of weight gain slows compared with previous growth, crossing two or more major percentiles on the growth chart in a downward direction.
Many conditions can result in FTT, including:
- Chronic diarrhea or vomiting
- Congestive heart failure (CHF)
- Formula allergy
- Improperly prepared formula
- Inadequate formula volume
- Malabsorption
- Parental neglect
- Severe gastroesophageal reflux
Organic vs. Non-organic FTT
FTT is categorized as “organic” (meaning the poor growth is secondary to another underlying medical condition) or “non-organic” (meaning there is no identified underlying medical cause). Nearly 90% of cases of FTT in children are non-organic and often relate to issues such as lack of proper feeding or lack of access to adequate food.
Normal RBC Values in Infants
- -The mean value for hemoglobin for healthy full-term 2-month-old infants is 11.2 g/dL (112 g/L), an anticipated drop from the mean hemoglobin at birth of 16.5 g/dL (165 g/L).
- -The decrease in hemoglobin occurs because fetal RBCs have a short half-life that leads to a “physiological nadir” for hemoglobin, sometimes also called “physiological anemia.”
- -In full-term newborns the marrow is stimulated to produce new RBCs only when the hemoglobin reaches its nadir of about 11 g/dL (110 g/L) at 7-9 weeks of age, after which the hemoglobin rises.
There are many causes of anemia in infants, among them:
- Iron deficiency (causes a microcytic anemia)
- Chronic disease (can cause a normocytic, normochromic anemia)
- Hemolysis (causes a drop in the total number of red blood cells and damages the remaining RBCs)
- Blood loss (causes a normocytic, normochromic anemia)
Inheritance Pattern of CF
For an infant to have the disease, both parents must be heterozygote carriers of the mutant allele. Each child of this couple have will have a 25% chance of having CF, a 25% chance of being unaffected, and a 50% chance of being a carrier like his parents.
CF Treatment is multi-pronged and includes
- -Nutritional management, with enzymes and vitamins and extra calories
- -Airway clearance, and
- -Treatment of airway infections.
General Guidelines for the Diagnostic Evaluation of FTT
- BUN, CR
- CXR
- CBC AND SMEAR
- ELECTROLYTES (SERUM)
- FECAL FAT ANALYSIS
- LFT
- neonatal screen
- occult blood, stool
- O&P, stool
- stool culture
- sweat chloride (sensitivity of 99%, and specificity near 90%.)
- thyroid function tests
- UA
- Urine culture
Differential Diagnosis for Failure to Thrive
- CHF
- formula allergy
- gastroenteritis
- hypothyroidism
- malabsorption