Childhood Growth And Development Flashcards

0
Q

Red flag developmental milestones in children

A

No social smile in 8 weeks (suggests visual impairments - cataracts may be present. Reversible but need to be removed before visual pathways fully formed at 3 months)

Not walking alone by 18 months

Not saying words by 18 months (worried about deafness)

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1
Q

Reasons for developmental delay in children

A

Chronic illness e.g. Frequent trips to hospital

Lack of stimulation (no interaction with caregiver, children require personal interaction to learn)

Sensory impairment (vision and hearing affect walking and speech)

Developmental disorder (learning difficulties)

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3
Q

Speech delay in development

A

May be the only sign of a learning difficulty. Speech is one of the most complex aspects of development. Other functions may be normal

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4
Q

3 phases of childhood growth

A

Infant: Nutrition most important factor. Also Thyroxine and Insulin-like growth factor. Rapid growth.

Childhood: GH, Thyroxine, nutrition main determinant of adult height

Pubertal: Oestrogen/Testosterone, GH. Fusion of growth plates.

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5
Q

Measurements in children

A

Weight: babies weighed naked

Height: Infants <2 measure length. Needs 2 people. Over 2 measure height in metres.

Head circumference: measures brain growth. 80% brain growth before age 5.

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6
Q

Growth concerns in children

A

Drop in height or weight >2 centiles

Small thin children: under nutrition, chronic disease, genetic disease, neglect

Short fat children: GH deficiency, hypothyroidism

Tall fat children: Risk of early puberty and subsequent short stature

Tall thin: mostly normal. May be Marfan’s, excess GH.

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7
Q

4 key areas of child development

A

Gross motor
Speech and language
Social interaction
Fine motor

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8
Q

What is global developmental delay?

A

Delays occur in all 4 key areas of development

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9
Q

What information would you use to assess a child with suspected growth delay?

A
Previous height and weight measurements
Parental height and weight
Clinical history of previous illness
Signs of muscle wasting
Signs of abuse (neglect, emotional, physical)
Social circumstances
Material circumstances
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10
Q

What does 10th centile for weight mean?

A

10 % of children of that age and gender would weigh this amount or less

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11
Q

Why is important to assess the weight of a baby in the first 2 weeks?

A

Most babies lose and regain weight in the first 2 weeks of life. Weight within the first week is an assessment of feeding.

A baby below 10% of birth weight at/before 2 weeks needs careful assessment for feeding problems or unrecognised illness.

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12
Q

When do you stop correcting for height and weight of a pre-term baby

A

After the age of 1.

Before that plot height and weight using gestational age, not actual age.

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13
Q

How is the weight of a child affected by illness?

A

Drop of one centile is common. Weight normally returns within 2-3 weeks.
Drop in 2 centiles requires further assessment

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14
Q

What are the benefits of breast-feeding for the mother?

A

Post partum recovery
Psychological Benefits
Empowerment
Improved maternal health outcomes e.g. osteoporosis, ovarian and breast cancer

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15
Q

Benefits of breast feeding for the baby

A
Nutritional Benefits
Improved Bonding
Immunologic protection
Reduced risk of cot Death
Reduction of allergy risk
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16
Q

Problems that may affect a baby’s ability to feed?

A
Premature Babies
Small babies
Pyloric stenosis
Cleft lip and palate
Hiatus hernia and oesophageal reflux
Anaemia
Metabolic abnormalities e.g. phenlketonuria
17
Q

Problems that may affect the mother’s ability to breastfeed?

A
Postnatal depression 
Mastitis
Multiple Births
Exhaustion
HIV infection 
Maternal illness