Developmental Disorders Flashcards
1
Q
What is an anomaly?
A
- any deviation from expected or average form and/or function (interpreted as abnormal)
- major: cosmetic/surgical consequences
- minor: little impact on individual well-being
2
Q
What is a malformation?
A
A morphological defect of an organ or region of the body resulting from an intrinsically abnormal developmental process
3
Q
Describe aspects of cardiac VSD
A
- associated with Down Syndrome
- usually symptomatic at birth but manifests within a few weeks
- acyanotic due to left-right shunt but uncorrection can increase pulmonary resistance leading to shunt reversal and cyanosis
- hole between ventricles allowing the mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
4
Q
Describe aspects of spina bifida
A
- neural tube defect where the lower portion of tube fails to develop or close properly
- can be open or closed
- an open one can result in a defect in the lumbosacral region where hernia of the dura mater and neural tissue with nerve roots of the spinal cord occurs
- folic acid given during pregnancy as preventative
5
Q
What are syndromes?
A
Multiple anomalies thought to be pathologically related
6
Q
What is Ectopia?
A
- abnormal location/position of an organ/tissue
- mostly congenital but can occur as result of injury
- eg. Ectopia cordis = displacement of heart outside body
7
Q
What is a hamartoma?
A
- tumour-like malformation composed of normal mature cells in usual location but as a disorganised mass
- mixture of mature tissue elements which grow and develop at same rate as surrounding tissue
- can be associated with underlying conditions (eg. Peuts-Jeghers Syndrome = mutation of STK11 gene, causes mucocutaneous pigmentation and hamartomous polyposis (commonly jejunum and ileum))
8
Q
What is a diverticulum?
A
- circumscribed pouch/sac caused by herniation of the mucosa lining an organ through a defect in a muscular coat
- eg. Meckel’s diverticulum
9
Q
Describe Meckel’s diverticulum and its complications
A
- congenital out-pouch of terminal ileum on anti-mesenteric border caused by an ending duct from the yolk sac during development that failures to involute
- contains all layers of intestine and have ectopic tissue within it
- complications: inflammation (mimics appendicitis), bleeding, perforation, obstruction/intussusception
10
Q
Describe diverticular disease and its complications
A
- common in adults lacking fibre (induces muscular hypertrophy increasing in transluminal pressure leading to out-pouching of the mucosa)
- usually sigmoid colon
- do not contain all layers = only mucosa and submucosa
- pouches herniate between muscle fibres where blood vessels and penetrate the colonic wall
- complications: inflammation and ulceration (abscesses, fistulae, haemorrhage), repeated attacks (which can cause eventual stenosis)
11
Q
Describe features of intussusception
A
- invagination of a portion of the intestine
- most common when very young at ileocaecal valve
- results in progressive compression of blood supply = haemorrhagic necrosis
- can be associated with neoplasia