Case 26 Flashcards
What are key findings from the history in a 9 week old diagnosed with CF?
Poor weight gain, good caloric intake, loose stools, good parenting skills, negative ROS.
What are key physical exam findings in a 9 week old diagnosed with CF?
Thin, little subQ fat, pallor, no dysmorphic features, elevated HR.
What is on the differential diagnosis for CF?
Malabsorption, formula allergy, improperly prepared formula, psychosocial failure to thrive, inadequate formula volume, congestive heart failure
What are key findings from testing for CF?
Anemia, elevated sweat chloride
Normal vitals for a newborn:
3.5 kg, HR 100-160, RR 30-60
Normal vitals for a 6 mo old:
7 kg, HR 110-160, RR 24-38
Normal vitals for a 1 yo:
19 kg, HR 90-150, RR 22-30
Normal vitals for a 3 yo:
14 kg, HR 80-125, RR 22-30
Normal vitals for a 5 yo:
18 kg, HR 70-115, RR 20-24
Normal vitals for a 10 yo:
33 kg, HR 60-100, RR 16-22
Normal vitals for a 12 yo:
40 kg, HR 60-100, RR 16-22
Normal vitals for a 14 yo:
50 kg, HR 60-100, RR 14-20
Assessing weight gain:
- Wt. is the most sensitive indicator or nutritional status
- Wt. loss immediately after birth rarely greater than 10 percent of birth weight
- Healthy infants gain approximately 20-30 grams per day during the first four months of life
- Wt. typically doubles by about 4 mo
- Formula-fed infants tend to gain weight faster than breastfed infants because they ingest more calories
- Reduced linear growth usually indicates more severe, prolonged malnutrition
- The brain is preferentially spared in protein-energy malnutrition, so reduced growth in head circumference occurs late and indicates very severe or longstanding malnutrition
What is the definition of FTT?
FTT (or lack of physiologic growth and development) is the term used to describe poor weight gain in children when:
- Weight less than 3rd percentile
- Weight for height/length is less than 3rd percentile
- Rate of growth slows compared to previous growth, crossing two or more major percentiles downward
What are the two categories of failure to thrive?
Organic FTT and Non-organic FTT
Organic FTT:
Growth failure caused by an acute or chronic disorder that results in inadequate nutrient intake, malabsorption of nutrients, or increased energy requirements. Common organic causes of FTT in infants include:
- Chronic diarrhea
- Formula allergy
- Congenital heart defects
- Cystic fibrosis
- Developmental deny with poor suck and swallow
- Renal tubular acidosis
- Vomiting caused by severe GERD or bowel obstruction
Non-organic FTT:
Growth failure not resulting from an underlying disease or disorder (nearly ninety percent of FTT cases). Inadequate caloric intake may result from:
- Poverty
- Poor understanding of feeding techniques
- Improperly prepared formula
- Inadequate supply of breast milk
- Neglect of the infant (i.e., lack of food)
- Less commonly, there is a psychological basis of non-organic FTT in which stimulation is lacking because caregiver is depressed, has poor parenting skills, or is responding to real or perceived external stresses.
Causes of anemia in an infant:
- Chronic disease
- Hemolysis
- Blood loss
- Physiological anemia
- Iron deficiency