Surgical Problems in the Newborn Flashcards

1
Q

Surgical problems in the neonate are mainly due to two factors. Name these factors

A

Prematurity

Congenital abnormality

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2
Q

What is the most common surgical problem found in premature babies?

A

Necrotising enterocolitis

Baby’s gut hasn’t formed properly

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3
Q

What is necrotising enterocolitis?

A

Tissues in the intestine become inflamed and start to die, leading to a perforation developing, which allows the contents of the intestine to leak into the abdomen

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4
Q

List symptoms of NEC

A

Poor feeding
Vomiting bile
Abdominal distension
Blood in stool

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5
Q

List features of NEC on imaging

A
Air on both sides of bowel
Gas under diaphragm
Mottled appearance
Pneumoperitoneum
Portal venous gas
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6
Q

State the 3 main ways the bowel can become obstructed

A

External pressure
Something in lumen
Something in wall

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7
Q

What is meconium ileus?

A

A neonatal bowel obstruction of the distal ileum due to abnormally thick and impacted meconium

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8
Q

List symptoms of meconium ileus

A

Absolute constipation by 48 hours
Bile-stained vomiting
Abdominal distension.

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9
Q

How is meconium ileus diagnosed?

A

Plain radiograph

Water soluble contrast given rectally

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10
Q

How does meconium ileus appear on XRAY?

A

Dilated bowel loops proximal to impaction
Tangled bowel distal to impaction
Soap bubble appearance
Absence of meconium in lumen

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11
Q

What is meconium? Within what time frame after birth does a baby usually pass meconium?

A

First faeces of newborn infant; black tar

First 24 hours

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12
Q

What is Hirschsprung’s disease?

A

A congenital disorder of the colon in which certain nerve cells, known as ganglion cells, are absent, causing chronic constipation and faeces impaction

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13
Q

What chronic condition typically presents with meconium ileus in 30% of cases?

A

Cystic fibrosis

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14
Q

What is jejunal atresia?

A

Congenital anomaly characterised by obliteration of the lumen of the jejunum leading to a high obstruction

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15
Q

List symptoms of jejunal atresia

A
Abdominal distension
Bilious vomiting but good appetite
Mild constipation (may be some faeces)
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16
Q

How is jejunal atresia diagnosed?

A

Plain radiograph

Water soluble lower GI contrast

17
Q

How does jejunal atresia appear on XRAY?

A

Triple bubble appearance (duodenum = two bubbles)
Fewer dilated small bowel loops (‘ladder’)
No gas in rectum

18
Q

State the main neonatal cause of obstruction caused by external pressure of the bowel

A

Hernia

19
Q

List clinical signs of obstructive hernias

A

Absence of groin crease on affected side

Mass in scrotum (due to peritoneal lining not closing)

20
Q

If an XRAY of a pelvic hernia was taken, how would the appearance compare to a higher obstruction?

A

Dilated bowel loops (‘ladder’ effect)

More loops as lower obstruction

21
Q

List management options for hernia

A

Manual reduction

Emergency surgery if obstruction

22
Q

What is bile? What is a normal colour of bile?

A

Breakdown product of billirubin in the liver, stored in the gallbladder and secreted into the jejunum
Usually mossy green, like fairy liquid

23
Q

What condition must be excluded first when a child presents with green bilious vomiting?

A

Malrotation

24
Q

What is malrotation?

A

A congenital anatomical anomaly that results from an abnormal rotation of the gut as it returns to the abdominal cavity during embryogenesis

25
Q

What other condition does malrotation predispose the neonate to?

A

Volvulus

26
Q

What is midgut volvulus?

A

Twisting of entire midgut along the axis of superior mesenteric artery
Leads to proximal bowel obstruction and ischaemia

27
Q

List investigations of choice in malrotation and volvulus

A

Upper GI contrast study

Plain radiography

28
Q

How is malrotation and volvulus managed?

A

Emergency surgery and correction

29
Q

How does malrotation and volvulus appear on imaging?

A

Double bubble of duodenal obstruction
Loss of C shape of duodenum
Multiple dilated bowel loops

30
Q

What is the longest fixed point in the belly? What is the significance of this?

A

Duodojejunal flexure to caecum

Along line, all blood supply to midgut comes from SMA

31
Q

How does the axis of the superior mesenteric artery change in malrotation?

A

DJ flexure is lying low and caecum is lying high due to twisting