Perinatal Period Flashcards

1
Q

connects umbilical vein to inferior vena cava

A

ductus venosus

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2
Q

channel of communication between the main pulmonary artery and the aorta

A

ductus arteriosus

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3
Q

opening between the two atria of the fetal heart

A

foramen ovale

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4
Q

What causes foramen ovale to close at birth?

A

decreased pulmonary vascular resistance causes increased left atrial pressure and eliminates right to left shunting

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5
Q

What causes ductus arteriosus to close at birth?

A

increased oxygen initiates constriction and subsequent closure

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6
Q

What is the last system to form in utero?

A

pulmonary system

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7
Q

When is surfactant production sufficient?

A

by 34 weeks of gestation

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8
Q

Normal weight loss in first week after birth

A

5-10%

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9
Q

When do disorders usually develop in newborns?

A

after baby has been feeding for 2-3 days

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10
Q

Commonly screened conditions

A

PKU, galactosemia, hemoglobinopathies, hypothyroidism, hearing

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11
Q

Type of growth restriction that implies event in EARLY pregnancy such as chromosomal abnormalities, drug or alcohol use, or congenital viral infections

A

symmetric

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12
Q

type of growth restriction that implies problem LATE in pregnancy such as pregnancy-induced hypertension, pre-eclampsia or placental insufficiency

A

asymmetric

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13
Q

What should all LGA infants be screened for?

A

hypoglycemia (40-45 mg/dL)

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14
Q

Chance of RDS at 28-30 weeks gestation

A

70%

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15
Q

Signs within 6 hrs of birth that include: tachypnea, retractions, nasal flaring, grunting, cyanosis

A

RDS

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16
Q

CXR findings of RDS

A

reticulogranular (ground glass) pattern and air bronchograms

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17
Q

Managment of RDS

A

oxygen, CPAP, vent if needed, artifical surfactant replacement

18
Q

Syndrome that is common with postmaturity and fetal distress

A

Meconium Aspiration Syndrome(MAS)

19
Q

Chest xray reveals fluffy infiltrates with alternating areas of lucency. Pneumothorax or pneumomediastinum and hyperinflation with flattening of diaphragm

A

Meconium Aspiration Syndrome(MAS)

20
Q

Management of Meconium Aspiration Syndrome(MAS)

A

gentle suctioning, chest physiotherapy, oxygen, CPAP/vent, abx

21
Q

Caused by sustained elevation in pulmonary vascular resistance
Can be idiopathic or secondary to MAS, RDS, congenital diaphragmatic hernia, hyperviscosity, sepsis, or other causes

A

Persistent Pulmonary HTN of Newborn (PPHN). aka- persistent fetal circulation

22
Q

Retained fetal lung fluid that often occurs in term or near-term infants and resolves within 24 hrs

A

Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn

23
Q

CXR shows perihilar streaking and fluid in interlobar fissures

A

Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn

24
Q

Type of jaundice that begins after 24 hrs of life, peaks around 3 days, and progresses cephalocaudally

A

physiologic

25
Q

Three mechanisms of physiologic jaundice

A

bilirubin production is higher, bilirubin clearance is decreased in liver, increased enterohepatic circulation

26
Q

At what serum bilirubin level does jaundice appear?

A

3-5

27
Q

Tests for presence of blood type antibodies in serum. A positive test results in agglutination of the RBCs

A

Indirect Coomb’s Test

28
Q

Use of a blue light that converts bilirubin to lumirubin to treat jaundice

A

phototherapy

29
Q

Used when phototherapy fails or an infant shows signs of bilirubin-induced signs of neurologic-dysfunction (BIND), including “acute-bilirubin encephalopathy” (reversible) and kernicterus (irreversible)

A

exchange transfusion

30
Q

Type of jaundice that is exaggerated when the milk takes longer to come in
Or when there is mild dehydration

A

Exaggerated physiologic hyperbilirubinemia or breast milk jaundice

31
Q

How often should a newborn feed?

A

every 2-3 hrs

32
Q

How many wet diapers should a newborn produce?

A

6-8 per day

33
Q

Can occur when unconjugated bilirubin reaches high levels and subsequently crosses the blood-brain barrier to damage cells of the brain

A

kernicterus

34
Q

level that kernicterus can occur in full term newborns

A

unconjugated bilirubin levels are above 20-25mg/dL

35
Q

How do you distinguish between pre-liver and post-liver problem?

A

Indirect bilirubin usually indicates a pre-liver problem while direct usually indicates a post-liver problem

36
Q

Peak age of SIDS

A

2-4 months of age.

37
Q

Risk factors for SIDS

A

sleeping position, bottle feeding, maternal smoking, infant overheating

38
Q

Treatment for breast milk failure jaundice

A

Nursing is interrupted for 24-48 hours

39
Q

Administered to any Rh-negative woman after any invasive procedure during pregnancy as well as after any miscarriage, abortion, or delivery of an Rh-positive infant

A

Rhogam

40
Q

Occurs in Rh-negative women who have NOT received appropriate care with Rhogam. Often results in fetal or neonatal death without appropriate prenatal intervention

A

Erythroblastosis fetalis (hydrops fetalis)

41
Q

antibodies directed against Rh protein. Can accompany any pregnancy where mom has Rh negative blood

A

Rh hemolytic disease

42
Q

Occurs in context of mom having type O blood and baby having type A or B. Disease usually is not severe

A

ABO hemolytic disease