congenital anomelies

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GOVERNMENT AYURVED COLLEGE NAGPUR DEPARTMENT OF BALROG CONGENITAL ANOMALIES IN CHILDRENS Presented By Prashant Nagre Komal Mishra Guided by Vd.Nikam Mam Vd.Shriwas Mam

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Page 1: Congenital anomelies

GOVERNMENT AYURVED COLLEGE NAGPUR

DEPARTMENT OF BALROG

CONGENITAL ANOMALIES IN CHILDRENS

Presented ByPrashant

NagreKomal Mishra

Guided byVd.Nikam Mam

Vd.Shriwas Mam

Page 2: Congenital anomelies

A congenital anomaly is a structural abnormality of any type that is present at birth.

Congenital anomalies may be induced by genetic or environmental factors. Most common congenital anomalies, however, show the family patterns expected of multifactorial inheritance (determined by a combination of genetic and environmental factors).

About 3% of all liveborn infants have an obvious major anomaly.

The incidence is about 6% in 2-year-olds and 8% in 5-year-olds.

Congenital anomalies may be single or multiple and of

minor or major clinical significance.

Page 3: Congenital anomelies

During the first 2 weeks of development, teratogenic agents usually kill the embryo or have no effect.

During the organogenesis period (3rd – 8th weeks), teratogenic agents disrupt development and may cause major congenital anomalies.

During the fetal period (9th week – 9th month) teratogens may produce morphological and functional abnormalities, particularly of the brain and eyes.

Page 4: Congenital anomelies

Causes of congenital anomalies;

1-Genetic factors such as chromosomal abnormalities and mutant genes.

2-Environmental factors e.g.: the mother had German measles in early pregnancy will cause abnormality in the embryo.

3-Combined genetic and environmental factors (mutlifactorials factors).

Page 5: Congenital anomelies

Types of abnormalities

Malformations: this occurs during the formation of the structures of the organ (during organogenesis) results in partial or complete non formation or alterations in the normal structure. This occurs in the 3rd to the 8th week of gestation. Ex. Cleft lip and or cleft palate.

Disruptions: results in morphological change of the already formed structure due to exposure to destructive process. e.g.: vascular accidents leading to intestinal atresia, amniotic band disruption.

Deformations: due to mechanical forces that affect a part of the fetus over a long period. Ex: talipes equinovarus deformity.

Syndrome: is a group of anomalies occurring together due to a common cause .

Page 6: Congenital anomelies

The genetic factors leading to congenital anomalies may be due to chromosomal abnormalities, gene mutations or may be multifactorial..

Chromosomal abnormalities occur due to: - late maternal age at the time of pregnancy

(leads to chromosomal non-disjunction), - radiation (causes chromosome deletions,translocations or

breaks), - viruses as German measles, - autoimmune diseases, - and some chemical agents as anti-biotic drugs.

Page 7: Congenital anomelies

Syndrome examples

• CHARGE– Colobomas– Heart defects– Atresia of the choanae – Retarded growth– Genital anomolies– Ear anomalies

• VACTERL– Verterbral anomalies (A)– Anal A– Cardiac A– Tracheoesophageal A – Renal A– Limb A

Page 8: Congenital anomelies

Environmental factors

• Infectious agents

• Radiation

• Chemical Agents

• Hormones

• Maternal Disease

• Nutritional Deficiencies

• Hypoxia

Page 9: Congenital anomelies

Infectious Agents• Rubella (German Measles)

– Malformations of the eye• Cataract (6th week) • Microphthalmia

– Malformations of the ear (9th week)• Congenital deafness

– Due to destruction of cochlea– Malformations of the heart (5th -10th week)

• Patent ductus arteriosis• Atrial septal defects• Ventricular septal defects

Page 10: Congenital anomelies

Infectious Agents (cont.)• Rubella (German measles)

– May be responsible for some brain abnormalities• Mental retardation

– Intrauterine growth retardation– Myocardial damage– Vascular abnormalites– Incidence

• 47%- during 1st four weeks• 22% - 5th – 8th weeks• 13% - 9th – 16th week

Page 11: Congenital anomelies

Infectious Agents (cont.)• Cytomegalovirus

– Disease is often fatal early on– Malformations

• Microcephaly– Cerebral calcifications– Blindness

• Chorioretinitis– Kernicterus (a form of jaundice)

– multiple petechiae of skin

– Hepatosplenomegaly

Page 12: Congenital anomelies

Infectious Agents (cont.)• Herpes Simplex Virus

– Intrauterine infection of fetus occasionally occurs– Usually infection is transmitted close to time of delivery– Abnormalities (rare)

• Microcephaly• Microphthalmos• Retinal dysplasia• Hepatosplenomegaly• Mental retardation

– Usually child infected by mother at birth• Inflammatory reactions during first few weeks

Page 13: Congenital anomelies

Infectious Agents (cont.)• Varicella (chickenpox)

– Congenital anomalies • 20% incidence following infection in 1st trimester• Limb hypoplasia• Mental retardation• Muscle atrophy

• HIV/AIDS– Microcephaly– Growth retardation– Abnormal facies (expression or appearance of the face)

Page 14: Congenital anomelies

Infectious Agents (cont.)• Toxoplamosis

– Protozoa parasite (Toxoplama gondii)• Sources

– Poorly cooked meat– Domestic animals (cats)– Contaminated soil with feces

• Syphilis– Congenital deafness– Mental retardation– Diffuse fibrosis of organs (eg. liver & lungs)

• In general most infections are pyrogenic– Hyperthemia can be teratogenic

• Fever

Page 15: Congenital anomelies

Radiation• Teratogenic effect of ionizing radiation well established

– Microcephaly– Skull defects– Spina bifida– Blindness– cleft palate– Extremity defects

• Direct effects on fetus or indirect effects on germ cells

• May effect succeeding generations

• Avoid X-raying pregnant women

Page 16: Congenital anomelies

Chemical agents/Drugs• Role of chemical agents & drugs in production of anomalies is

difficult to assess– Most studies are retrospective

• Relying on mother’s memory– Large # of pharmaceutical drugs used by pregnant women

• NIH study – 900 drugs taken by pregnant women– Average of 4/woman during pregnancy– Only 20% of women use no drugs during pregnancy

– Very few drugs have been positively identified as being teratogenic

Page 17: Congenital anomelies

Drugs

• Thalidomide– Antinauseant & sleeping pill– Found to cause amelia & meromelia

• Total or partial absence of the extremities– Intestinal atresia– Cardiac abnormalities– Many women had taken thalidomide early in pregnancy (in

Germany in 1961)

Page 18: Congenital anomelies

Drugs (cont.)

• Aminoteptrin– Antagonist of Folic Acid– Antineoplastic agent which inhibits mitosis– Defects

• Anencephaly• Meningocele• Hydrocephalus• Cleft lip & palate

Page 19: Congenital anomelies

Drugs (cont.)• Anticonvulsants (to treat epilepsy)

– Diphenylhydantoin (phenytoin)• Craniofacial defects• Nail & digital hypoplasia• Growth abnormalities• Mental deficiency• The above pattern is know as “fetal hydantoin

syndrome”– Valproic acid

• Neural tube defects• Heart defects• Craniofacial & limb anomalies

Page 20: Congenital anomelies

Drugs (cont.)• Antipsychotic drugs (major tranquilizers)

– Phenothiazine & lithium• Suspected teratogenic agents

• Antianxiety drugs (minor tranquilizers)– Meprobamate, chlordiazepoxide,

• Severe anomalies in 11-12% of offspring where mothers were treated with the above compared to 2.6% of controls

– diazepam (valium)• Fourfold in cleft lip with or without cleft palate

Page 21: Congenital anomelies

Drugs (cont.)• Anticoagulants

– Warfarin (A.K.A cumadin or cumarol)• Teratogenic• Hypoplasia of nasal cartilage• Chondrodysplasia• Central nervous system defects

– Mental retardation– Atrophy of the optic nerves

• Antihypertensive agents– angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor

• Growth dysfunction, renal dysfunction, oliogohydramnios, fetal death

Page 22: Congenital anomelies

Drugs (cont)• Propylthiouracil

– Goiter– Mental retardation

• Potassium iodide– Goiter– Mental retardation

• Streptomycin– deafness

• Sulfonamides– kernicterus

• Imipramine (antidepr.)– Limb deformaties

• Tetracyclines– Bone & tooth anomalies

• Amphetamines– Oral clefts– CV abnormalities

• Quinine– Deafness

• Aspirin– Potentially harmful in large

doses

Page 23: Congenital anomelies

Alcohol• Relationship between alcohol consumption & congenital

abnormalities• Fetal alcohol syndrome

– Craniofacial abnormalities• Short palpebral fissures• Hypoplasia of the maxilla

– Limb deformities• Altered joint mobility & position

– Cardiovascular defects• Ventricular septal abnormalites

– Mental retardation– Growth deficiency

Page 24: Congenital anomelies

Cigarette Smoking

• Has not been linked to major birth defects– Smoking does contribute to intrauterine growth retardation

& premature delivery– Some evidence that is causes behavioral disturbances

Page 25: Congenital anomelies

Hormones• Androgenic Agents

– Synthetic progestins were used frequently to prevent abortion• Ethisterone & norethisterone

– Have considerable androgenic activity» Masculinization of female genitalia

• Diethylstilbesterol– Commonly used in the 1940’s & 1950’s to prevent

abortion; in 1971 determined that DES caused increased incidence of vaginal & cervical cancer in women who had been exposed to DES in utero

– In addition high % suffered from reproductive dysfunction

• Oral Contraceptives– Low teratogenic potential, discontinue if pregnancy

suspected• Cortisone-cleft palate in mice (not humans)

Page 26: Congenital anomelies

Digestive system anom.)Cleft lip/palate

• Incidence: about 1 in 600 live births• Cleft lip with or without cleft palate• Syndromic: associated with another syndrome. Syndromic

cleft lip/palate is more common in males• Nonsyndromic: isolated finding, not associated with any

particular syndrome. Non syndromic tends to be equal between males and females.

• Consider submucous cleft palate with bifid uvula

Page 27: Congenital anomelies

Cleft lip/palate

Page 28: Congenital anomelies

Tongue Tie (Ankylogossia)

Page 29: Congenital anomelies

Gastroschisis

Page 30: Congenital anomelies

Omphalocele

Page 31: Congenital anomelies

Esophagial fistula,Hirschsprungs dis,

Page 32: Congenital anomelies

imperforated anus,intestinal atresia

Page 33: Congenital anomelies

Nervous systemAncephalous

Page 34: Congenital anomelies

Spina bifida

Page 35: Congenital anomelies

HYDROCEPHALUS&MICROCEPHALUS

Page 36: Congenital anomelies

EYE

Anopthalmos&blue sclera,cloboma

Page 37: Congenital anomelies

congenital catracrt ,cystic eye ball,dermoid,micropthalmia

Page 38: Congenital anomelies

EARAccessary

auricle,micro&macrotia,Periauricular sinus

Page 39: Congenital anomelies

CVS Anomelies

• Tetralogy of fallot• VSD• ASD• Stenosis of arotic

valve

Page 40: Congenital anomelies

Respiratory anomelies

Tracheoesophageal fistula&cyst of lung

Page 41: Congenital anomelies

Renal anomeliesPolycystic kidney ,Horshoe kidney

,Renal dysplasias

Page 42: Congenital anomelies

Bladder exstrophy

Page 43: Congenital anomelies

Genital systemBicornuate

Uterus&hypo&epispadia

Page 44: Congenital anomelies

Ambiguous genitalia

Page 45: Congenital anomelies

Congenital hydrocele &hernia

Page 46: Congenital anomelies

Limbs anomelies

Polydactyl,syndactyly,ectrodactyly

Page 47: Congenital anomelies

Phocomelia syndrome,meromalia

Page 48: Congenital anomelies

Club Foot

Page 49: Congenital anomelies

Twin-Twin Transfusion Syndrome

Page 50: Congenital anomelies

Ambras syndrome

Page 51: Congenital anomelies

Craniopagus parasiticus

Page 52: Congenital anomelies

Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva

Page 53: Congenital anomelies

Progeria

Page 54: Congenital anomelies

Cystic hygroma

Page 55: Congenital anomelies

Sacrococcygeal teratoma

Page 56: Congenital anomelies

Hemangioma

Page 57: Congenital anomelies

Prevention of birth defects

• Good prenatal care• Iodine supplementation eliminates mental retardation & bone

deformities– Prevent cretinism

• Folate/Folic Acid supplementation– incidence of neural tube defects

• Avoidance of alcohol & other drugs during all stages of pregnancy– incidence of birth defects

Page 58: Congenital anomelies

सहज व्या�धि�• प्रा�गभि�हिहत तददुख स�यो�ग� व्या��यो इहित ।• तच्च दुख हि�हि�धि�म -• अध्यो�त्मि�मकम,आधि�� हितकम, आधि�द!हि�कम इहित ॥

(स#.स#२४/३)

Page 59: Congenital anomelies

अध्या�त्मि��क

१] आदिदबलप्रा�+त - म�त+ज� - हि,त+ज�

२] जन्मबलप्रा�+त -रसक+ त -द हद ,चा�र

३]द�षबलप्रा�+त- आशयो-आमशयो -प्क्��शयो आश्रयो-श�रिरर -म�नस 

Page 60: Congenital anomelies

आधि�भौ ति�क�

१]शस्�क+ त

२]व्याल्क+ त

Page 61: Congenital anomelies

आधि�दै�ति�क�१] क�लबल - व्या�पन्न -अव्या�पन्न२] दै��बल ३] स्�भौ��बल - क�लक� � - अक�लक� �

Page 62: Congenital anomelies

…Th@nk

you…