pediatric potpourri

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Pediatric potpourri Edward Les, MD May 6, 2004

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Pediatric potpourri. Edward Les, MD May 6, 2004. Infantile colic Neonatal conjunctivitis Gastroesophageal reflux Breast-feeding issues Omphalitis. Basic rules of fluid management Breath-holding events Constipation Pediatric oncology briefs Otitis media. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Pediatric potpourri

Pediatric potpourri

Edward Les, MDMay 6, 2004

Page 2: Pediatric potpourri

Agenda: Common pediatric ED problems not covered elsewhere in curriculum

Infantile colicNeonatal conjunctivitisGastroesophageal refluxBreast-feeding issuesOmphalitis

Basic rules of fluid managementBreath-holding eventsConstipation Pediatric oncology briefsOtitis media

Page 3: Pediatric potpourri

Case

3-week-old boy brought to ED with c/o emesis since first week of life

Formula changed twice with no improvementEffortless spitting up after each feedBirthweight 7 lbs 2 oz, now 8 lbs

Page 4: Pediatric potpourri

What’s appropriate rateof weight gain for babes?Regain BW by 10 days

then 20-30 g per day 1st 3 months

Double BW by 5 months of age

15-20 g /day 3-6 months10-15 g/day 6-9 months10 g/day 9-12 months

Page 5: Pediatric potpourri

Gastroesophageal refluxPrevalence? > 40% of infants regurgitate >once/day

– 50% resolve by 6 months, 75% by 12 months, 95% by 18 months

Nelson et al, Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, 2000Orenstein, Pediatr Rev, 1999

Page 6: Pediatric potpourri

Gastroesophageal reflux

Not a disease in most cases…

simply reflects immature LES tone

only ~ 1 in 300 infants has “significant” reflux with associated complications

Nelson’s Pediatrics 2000

Page 7: Pediatric potpourri

Name 5 complications of infant GE reflux:1. Parental anxiety

– the biggie

2. Esophagitis(arching, irritability, Sandifer)

3. Failure to thrive

4. Apnea/choking (ALTE)

5. Recurrent aspiration

Page 8: Pediatric potpourri

GE reflux: diagnosis

Clinical!!!

Confirmation of more severe reflux:24 hour pH probeMilk scan

UGI barium not sens/specific

Page 9: Pediatric potpourri

GE reflux: treatment options

Simple GER Reassurance, smaller/more frequent feeds, thickened feeds, positional therapy

Esophagitis* Antacids, H2 receptor blockers, metoclopramide

FTT* Nutritional rehab, NG feeds, may need fundoplication

Apnea* Monitoring, may need fundo

Recurrent aspiration* May need fundo

* Consultation with peds or GI

Page 10: Pediatric potpourri

Case

Teary, very stressed 23-year-old first time mom with 3-day-old breast-fed little girl

• ++ worried that baby “not getting enough”• seems hungry, spends 40 minutes nursing but is “on and

off repeatedly, cries a lot• “my breasts are REALLY SORE, and I’m not sure I even

have enough milk for her….”• “I called HealthLink to see if I could give her formula and

the nurse gave me a 10 minute lecture about the importance of breast-feeding.”

Page 11: Pediatric potpourri

Baby’s exam:

No dysmorphism; moderate jaundiceAlert, rouses easily, strong cryAF normal, roots, v. strong suck, oropharynx/palate normalNormal RR bilatChest clear, CVS normal, good pulses; sl. mottled extremitiesAbdomen/umbilicus normalNormal female genitalia and anusSpine/hips normalNormal Moro, grasp, tone, reflexes

Page 12: Pediatric potpourri

Ed’s rules of infant nutrition

1. “Breast is best”…..…but ultimately the kid

simply needs enough to eat!!!

2. Lactation consultants are your friends

Page 13: Pediatric potpourri

Signs of inadequate intake in BF infant

Neifert, Clin Perinatol 1999

• Irregular or non-sustained sucking at breast• < 1 wet diaper per feed• Nursing < 10 minutes/breast each feed; also, shouldn’t

be > 25 minutes/breast• Failure to demand to nurse at least 8 times daily• Taking only 1 breast at each feeding• Crying, fussing, and appearing hungry after most

feedings• Too much weight loss in first week, suboptimal gain

thereafter

Page 14: Pediatric potpourri

BF strategies• Nipple care

– Exposure to air, keep dry b/w feeds, apply lanolin, manual milk expression, more freq shorter feeds, nipple shields

• Proper technique– Feed when hungry– Ensure proper latch – watch babe feed in ED– Most babies are not “avid suckers” in the first three days; by day 4

they “wake up” and start packing on the weight they’ve lost

• Supplemental bottle feeds with manually expressed milk or formula if necessary– “nipple confusion” is overblown!!

Page 15: Pediatric potpourri

BF strategies

• Before assuming mom has insufficient milk, exclude 3 possibilites:

1. Errors in feeding technique2. Remediable maternal factors: diet, lack

of rest, or emotional distress3. Physical disturbances in the baby that

interfere with eating or weight gain

Page 16: Pediatric potpourri

Case

• 4-week-old babe presents with very anxious parents – he’s been crying incessantly for several hours, completely inconsolable; several other episodes over past few days, seems to be getting worse. Otherwise feeding well, 6 wet diapers/day, stooling well, no fever. Previously well.

• Approach?

Page 17: Pediatric potpourri

How much crying is normal?

At 2 weeks: 2 hours per day

Increases to 3 hours at 6 weeks, then declines to ~ 1 hour at 12 weeks

Page 18: Pediatric potpourri

Infantile colic

• Excessive crying or fussiness• Occurs in 10-20% of infants

Defined as paroxysms of crying in an otherwise healthy infant for > 3 hours/day on > 3 days/week, usually begins ~ 3 weeks of age and resolves at around 3 months of age

If things haven’t settled by 4 months, consider alternate dx

Page 19: Pediatric potpourri

Colic

• Intense crying for several hours, usually in late afternoon or evening

• Often infant appears to be in pain, may have legs drawn up, may have slight abdominal distension

• May have temporary relief with passage of gas

Repercussions: • early discontinuation of BF• Multiple formula changes• Parental anxiety and distress• Increased incidence of child abuse

Page 20: Pediatric potpourri

Colic: etiology?Unknown:

? Temperament? Ineffective parental response to crying? Overfeeding ? Hunger

Page 21: Pediatric potpourri

Colic: diff dx?

Rule out:

• Hair tourniquet• Corneal abrasion• Incarcerated hernia• Consider abuse (shaken baby)• Other (ie reflux esophagitis, UTI, inguinal

hernia, testicular torsion, intussusception, etc)

Page 22: Pediatric potpourri

Hair tourniquet

Treatment?

• Excision• “Nair”

Page 23: Pediatric potpourri

Colic: management

Reasonably effective:• Counseling/ reassurance• Respite care• Feeding/holding/rocking/

sleeping/diaper change• Routine burping, avoid

over/underfeeding

• F/U with GP or peds to provide support and ensure no organic etiology

Rarely effective:• Formula changes• Simethicone to decrease

intestinal gas• Music, car rides, swings

etc

? Phenobarb or benadryl for occasional relief

Page 24: Pediatric potpourri

Case

• 10 day old female with foul-smelling discharge from umbilicus

• Afebrile, feeding/voiding/pooping well, no red flags on history

Just a smelly belly button or something more?

Page 25: Pediatric potpourri

Omphalitis

• Purulent, foul-smelling discharge with erythema of surrounding skin

• Secondary to poor cord hygiene

• S. aureus/Group A Strep/Gm –’s

• Tx; topical care and systemic antibiotics (

Page 26: Pediatric potpourri

Omphalitis: complications

• Necrotizing fasciitis• Sepsis• Portal vein

thrombosis• Hepatic abscesses

Page 27: Pediatric potpourri

When should the umbilical cord separate?

• Usually w/i 2 weeks

• Delayed separation: think of possible leukocyte adhesion defect

Page 28: Pediatric potpourri

Case 3 day old babe:

– Red eye with discharge

– Differential diagnosis?

• Chemical irritation (esp AgNO3)• Nasolacrimal duct obstruction w/ dacryocystitis • Gonorrhea• Chlamydia• Herpes simplex• Infantile glaucoma

Diagnosis: gram stain, culture, flourescein, antigen detection

Page 29: Pediatric potpourri

Congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction

5% of all newborns

*absence of conjunctival injection!

Warm compresses, gentle massage, watchful waiting

95% resolve by 6 months; if not, refer for probing (earlier if multiple episodes of dacryocystitis)

Page 30: Pediatric potpourri

Dacryocystitis

Bacterial infection of nasolacrimal gland with duct obstruction

Mgt:

– Swab C+S

– Topical + systemic antibiotics

Page 31: Pediatric potpourri

Gonorrheal conjunctivitis

Hyperpurulent discharge at day 2-4

• Potentially a disaster!!• Mgt?

– Need FSW– Admit for antibiotics, eye irrigation, mgt of complications:

corneal ulceration, scarring, synechiae formation– Rx concomitantly for Chlamydia– Rx mom and her partner

Page 32: Pediatric potpourri

Chlamydial conjunctivitis

C. trachomatis : presents on day 3-10 (but may be up to 6 weeks)

Mom with active untreated chlamydia: babe has 40% chance of infection

What’s the real worry here?

• 10-20% have associated pneumonia – untreated can lead to chronic cough and pulmonary impairment

• “well” with pneumonia and staccato cough• Creps/wheezes; patchy infiltrates w/ hyperinflation• CBC: eosinophilia• Rx: systemic erythro x 14 days• Treat mom and her partner,

Page 33: Pediatric potpourri

Herpetic conjunctivitis

• Day 2-16• Flourescein stain: dendritic ulcer

• Do FSW

Rx:• IV acyclovir, topical vidarabine• 30-50% of cases recur w/i 2 years

Page 34: Pediatric potpourri

Infantile glaucoma

Classic triad (seen in 30%):– Epiphora– Photophobia– Blepharospasm

• Injected red watery eye• Cloudy, enlarged cornea• Cupped optic disk• Buphthalmos if dx delayed

Emergent referral to opthalmologist

Page 35: Pediatric potpourri

Case

3 year old girlURTI x 5 days

Now R otalgia, increased fever, irritable ++

Page 36: Pediatric potpourri

Acute otitis media

• accounts for 30% of all pediatric outpatient antimicrobial prescripitions

• Diagnostic accuracy?– We suck– Pediatricians only ~ 50%

correct• Pichichero et al 2001:

study of 514 pediatricians

Page 37: Pediatric potpourri

Otitits media – criteria?

• Yellow/red• Opacity/effusion • Immobility• Bulging• Loss of landmarks

Page 38: Pediatric potpourri

The normal TM: which ear?

An annulus fibrosus

Lpi  long process of incus - sometimes visible through a healthy translucent drum

Um  umbo - the end of the malleus handle and the centre of the drum

Lr  light reflex - antero-inferioirly

Lp  Lateral process of the malleus

At  Attic also known as pars flaccida

Hm  handle of the malleus

Page 39: Pediatric potpourri

OM Bugs

• S. pneumoniae – 40%• non-typeable H. influenzae – 25%• M. catarrhalis – 10 %• others – GAS, S. aureus – rare• viral – 20-30%!

Page 40: Pediatric potpourri

OM – management?

General:– Analgesics/antipyretics

< 2 years: antibiotics x 10 days> 2 years: watchful waiting

• recheck in 48-72 hours• 80% spont. resolution• If no improvement: treat w/ abx (x 5 days)

Page 41: Pediatric potpourri

OM - antibiotics

1st line (x 5 days)

• Amoxicillin 40 mg/kg/d

• Hi-dose amoxicillin 90 mg/kd/day– If recent (< 3 months) antibiotics exposure or daycare or recurrent AOM

• Pen-allergic: erythromycin-sulfisoxasole (40 mg/kg/d erythromycin) or TMP/S (6-10 mg/kg/d TMP)

Consider 10 days if recurrent AOM or perforated TM

Maximum dose not to exceed adult dose

Page 42: Pediatric potpourri

OM - antibioticsNon-responders

• [Amoxicillin-clavulanate (40 mg/kg/d amox) x 10 days+/- amoxicillin] (40 mg/kg/d) x 10 daysor

• Cefuroxime (40 mg/kg/d) x 10 daysor

• Cefprozil (30 mg/kg/d) x 10 days

B-lactam – allergic• Erythromycin-sulfisoxazole (40 mg/kg/d) x 10 days

or• Azithromycin (10 mg/kg 1st day, 5 mg/kg/d 4 more days)

or • Clarithromycin (15 mg/kg/d) x 10 days

Maximum dose not to exceed adult dose

Page 43: Pediatric potpourri

What about…

• Decongestants?

• Anithistamines?

• Topical steroids/antibiotics?

No!

No!

No!

Page 44: Pediatric potpourri

AOM – f/u

In 3 months: assess

for persistent OME which may lead to hearing loss

Page 45: Pediatric potpourri

Recurrent AOM:risk factors

• Smoking• Daycare• Pacifiers• Bottle-feeding• Poor antibiotic compliance

Page 46: Pediatric potpourri

Recurrent AOM:when to refer?

> 3 AOM per 6 months

> 4 AOM per 12 months

Page 47: Pediatric potpourri

Case

3 year old girlTreated for AOM x 3/7 with cephalexin; abx

changed to azithro day 4 because of L facial swelling GP attributed to “drug allergy”

Now day 6, presents to ED with ongoing L “facial swelling”

Alert, afebrile, playful

Page 48: Pediatric potpourri

otoscopic findings

Facial expression

Page 49: Pediatric potpourri

Bell’s palsy in setting of AOM

IV antibiotics (ceftriaxone)

CT temporal bone

Urgent ENT consultationneed wide myringotomy

Page 50: Pediatric potpourri

Case

11-year-old boy – History of chronic OM with

effusion; presents w/ 10-day history of fever, R otalgia and right, dull occipital headache

– Alert, temperature of 38.4 C. – Otoscopy: thickened, but

intact TM; middle ear effusion

– Postauricular edema, erythema, tenderness, and fluctuance

– Neuro exam normal

WBC 18.7 w/ left shiftCT scan of the temporal bones: soft tissue changes within the middle ear and mastoid and an overlying subperiosteal abscess and possible lateral sinus thrombosis.

Page 51: Pediatric potpourri

Mastoiditis

• Bulging erythematous tympanic membrane• Erythema, tenderness, and edema over the

mastoid area• Postauricular fluctuance• Protrusion of the auricle

ED Tx: IV abx (ceftriaxone), CT, ENT consult

Page 52: Pediatric potpourri

What’s this?

Cholesteatoma

Complications:

• Erosion of bony labyrinth• Facial paralysis• Hearing loss• Meningitis/brain

abscess/hydrocephalus

Refer to ENT tout-de-suite

Page 53: Pediatric potpourri

Management?

Page 54: Pediatric potpourri

Case

8 year old boy melting candles on stove

• Pot on fire: grabs pot, flames his face and hair, pulls hot burning wax over his hands, legs; standing in pool of hot wax before running from room

• Exam: Alert, GCS 15, not hoarse; has circumoral 1st and 2nd degree burn; 15% BSA 2nd degree burns to rest of body

Mgt?

Page 55: Pediatric potpourri

Fluid management

• Note that the Parkland formula is modified for kids < 20 kg: accounts for proportionately higher maintenance fluid req in smaller children = 3 mL/kg/% burn (1/2 in 1st 8 hours) PLUS maint fluids

• Know the rule of thumb for maint fluids in kids: 4-2-1– 4 ml/kg 1st 10 kg– 2 ml/kg 2nd 10 kg– 1 ml/kg >20 kg

Page 56: Pediatric potpourri

Example: 12 kg kid with 10% BSA burnConventional Parkland formula:

– 4 x 12 x 10 = 480 mL– ½ in 1st 8 hours = 30 mL/h

Modified formula:– 3 x 12 x 10 = 360 mL– ½ in 1st 8 hours = 23 mL/h– Add maint fluid: 44 mL/h– TOTAL fluids = 67 mL/h

Page 57: Pediatric potpourri

Case 3 year old boy c/o abdominal pain x 2/7No BM x 10 days; having problems for 4 months

• No prev hx constipation• Coincided with start of toilet training

• Exam normal except palpable mass LLQ;• Rectal reveals large amount of stool in vault; no fissure

– Some soiling noted on underwear

AXR:

Page 58: Pediatric potpourri
Page 59: Pediatric potpourri

Case 3 year old boy No BM x 10 days; having problems for 4 months

• No prev hx constipation• Coincided with start of toilet training

• Exam normal except palpable mass LLQ;• Rectal reveals large amount of stool in vault; no fissure

– Some soiling noted on underwear

Management?

Page 60: Pediatric potpourri
Page 61: Pediatric potpourri

Functional constipation:“Re-train the bowel”

Often not aggressive enough

• Enemas – adult fleets OK after age 2– May need multiple over 2 or 3 days– In severe cases, Go-Lytely ‘til clear

• Toilet training strategies• Diet: fiber/fluids• Lactulose

– 0.5 ml/kg bid, adjust prn• Mineral oil

– 1 ml/kg hs• Infants: Karo syrup 1 tsp/8 oz formula

GP or peds f/u important Always consider and r/o organic causes!

Page 62: Pediatric potpourri

Case

7 day old breast-fed boy• c/o “constipation”• Mom concerned because no BM for past 3

days

Passed mec day 1, stooled day 2 and 4

What’s normal stool frequency?

Page 63: Pediatric potpourri

When is the first stool normally passed?

99% of infants pass 1st stool w/i 1st 24 hours• Failure = possible obstruction/anatomic/physiologic

abnormality

• 95% of Hirschprung’s disease and 25% of CF do not pass 1st stool 1st day

• Prems: common to have delayed passage of 1st stool

Page 64: Pediatric potpourri

Case Constipated 6 month old boy• Has always stooled infreq ~ 1/week• Also v. slow feeder

O/E:• T 35.9, P 60, R 20, BP 90/60• Abdomen soft, non-distended, rectal vault contains soft

stool; back exam unremarkable• Appears generally hypotonic

Dx?

Hypothyroid!

Page 65: Pediatric potpourri

Case 10 month old girl

• Very constipated for several months, suppository dependent

• Has always fed poorly

O/E: alert, small for age• Abdo mildly distended, palpable mass LLQ• Rectal: no stool in ampulla

Dx test?

Rectal suction biopsy: Hirschprung’s

Page 66: Pediatric potpourri

Case

6 month old infant with lethargy, constipation, poor feeds x 2 days

O/E: afebrile, VSS, but poor suck, gen hypotonia, absent reflexes

Diagnosis?

• Infant botulism: ingestion of spores in honey/corn syrup; source often unknown

• Hospitalize; may need intubation– Treat with BIG

Page 67: Pediatric potpourri

Case

15 month boy brought to ED by paramedics after episode of cyanosis and apnea accompanied by some shaking of the extremities

• Prev well• Event occurred just after mom denied him a

cookie before dinner

Diagnosis?

Page 68: Pediatric potpourri

Breath-holding spellsCommon b/w 6 months and 4 years

(peak 1½ - 3 yrs.)Benign!Some association w/ iron deficiency

Mocan et al. Arch Dis Child 1999.

• Blue/cyanotic type– Vigorous crying provoked by physical/emotional upset leads to

end-expiratory apnea– Followed by cyanosis, opisthotonus, rigidity, loss of tone, +/-

brief jerking• Pallid type

– Precipitated by unexpected event that frightens the child

Page 69: Pediatric potpourri

When is a BHE not a BHE?

• Precipitating event is minor or non-existent

• Hx of no or minimal crying or breath-holding

• Episode last > 1 minute

• Period of post-episode sleepiness lasts > 10 minutes

• Convulsive component of episode is prominent and occurs before cyanosis

• Child is < 6 months or > 4 years old

Consider seizure disorder or cardiac etiology (esp long QT syndrome)

Page 70: Pediatric potpourri

Case

3 year old boy with Down’s syndrome

• 1 week of fatigue, irritability, pallor; petechial rash today

• No hx of fever, URTI sx, vomiting or diarrhea

O/E: pale, lethargic; diffuse lymphadenopathy and HSM

Page 71: Pediatric potpourri

Pediatric oncologyCancer Distribution % Survival %Leukemia 30 75CNS 19 60Lymphoma 13 75Neuroblastoma 8 10-20 (stage 3,4)

75-90 (stage 1,2)Wilm’s 6 90Soft tissue 7 65Bone 5 65Retinoblastoma 4 95Liver 1 45Other 8

Page 72: Pediatric potpourri

Most common findings in childhood ALL?• HSM 70%• Fever 40-60%• Lymphadenopathy 25-50%• Bleeding 25-50% w/

petechiae or purpura• Bone/joint pain 25-40%• Fatigue 30%• Anorexia 20-35%

Page 73: Pediatric potpourri

Most common sites of pediatric ALL extramedullary relapse?

1. CNS

2. Testicular (painless swelling, usually unilateral)

Page 74: Pediatric potpourri

Most common cranial nerve abnormality in children presenting w/ increased ICP secondary to posterior fossa tumor?

• cranial n. VI palsy

Page 75: Pediatric potpourri

Case

• 18 month old girl presents with “black eyes”; developed over past week; no known trauma

• Also has “dancing eyes” and seems off balance

Page 76: Pediatric potpourri

Neuroblastoma

Most common malignancy of infancy

• Mean age 20 months• Arises from neural crest tissure (adrenal medulla,

sympathetic ganglia)• Most common presentation is painless abdo/flank mass; may

see calcifications on AXR• Multiple metastases possible• Infants may have “blueberry muffin” rash• Perioribital ecchymoses and opsoclonus/mycolonus should

prompt consideration of neuroblastoma• Dx: imaging, urine VMA/HVA

Page 77: Pediatric potpourri

Case

4 month old boy

• “Eyes don’t look right”

Page 78: Pediatric potpourri

Retinoblastoma

Usually confined to the eye

• 60% nonhereditary and unilateral• 15% hereditary (AD) and unilateral• 25% hereditary (AD) and bilateral

Hereditary types at increased risk of other neoplasms: brain, osteosarcoma, soft tissue sarcoma, melanomas

Page 79: Pediatric potpourri

Case

3 year-old boy with unsteady gait– Progressively worse x 12 hours, now refusing to walk– Had varicella 2 weeks ago

On exam: – Afebrile, looks well– Mild truncal unsteadiness, ataxic gait– Normal strength and reflexes

Diagnosis?

Page 80: Pediatric potpourri

Come to my ACH Grand Rounds: May 27 8 a.m.

A Balanced Approach to the Unbalanced Child:

Acute pediatric ataxia

Page 81: Pediatric potpourri

Thank you.

Questions?