* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Case follow up
Basal metabolic rate wikipedia , lookup
Metabolomics wikipedia , lookup
Plant nutrition wikipedia , lookup
Genetic code wikipedia , lookup
Biosynthesis wikipedia , lookup
Fatty acid metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Wilson's disease wikipedia , lookup
Amino acid synthesis wikipedia , lookup
The septic appearing infant: approach and case discussion Muhammad Waseem, MD Pediatric Emergency Medicine Lincoln Hospital Bronx, NY Another Sepsis Work-up Early Discharge  New diagnoses in ED  Inborn errors of metabolism  Congenital anomalies Septic-Appearing infant  ABCs  Cultures & antibiotics  “An ill-appearing infant is septic until proven otherwise” but widen your differential Case #1  10-day-old-term infant drinking 3-4 oz at first  Decreased appetite & vomiting  Sleepy  “ill appearing”  Flat fontanel  Dry mucous membrane  Enlarged liver  Slight hypotonia  Glucose 25  40 (after correction) Organic Aciduria  Presents in first 2-3 week  Septic-appearing  Irritability or lethargy  Vomiting  Hypotonia  Hepatomegaly  Hypoglycemia  Breath odor  Sweaty feet or stale urine Coma  Seizure  Respiratory distress  The basic Approach to Inborn Errors of Metabolism  “limited repertoire” of symptoms  Non specific  Symptoms may overlap  E.coli sepsis (galactosemia)  Clinically indistinguishable High index of suspicion Clinical presentations  Vomiting  Lethargy  Coma  Seizure  Jaundice  Odor  Body  Urine Inborn error of metabolism  Encephalopathy without acidosis  Encephalopathy with acidosis  Hepatic syndrome IEM with No Acidosis  Maple Syrup Urine disease  Urea cycle defects IEM with acidosis  Organic aciduria  Lactic acidosis Hepatic Syndrome  Galactosemia Acute Evaluation  Glucose  pH & HCO3  Electrolytes  Ammonia  Lactate  Pyruvate Ammonia level        Susceptible to artifacts Must be placed in ice Immediate processing < 80 mcg/dL Hundreds to thousands Readily traverses BBB Central hyperventilation  Urine  Organic acids  Amino acids  Ketones  Reducing substances  Hypoglycemia  Acidosis  Hyperammonemia Hyperammonemia  Urea cycle defects  Organic acidemia  Transient hyperammonemia of the newborn Diagnosis of hyperammonenia Blood gas Acidosis No acidosis Organic acid Plasma AA sAA elevation No sAA elevation Urine orotic acid High Normal or low Plasma citruline Organic Acidemias Citrullinemia Argininemia OTC Deficiency Argininoscuccinic acidemia HHH syndrome low Normal or elevated CPS deficiency Transient or NAG synthetase hyperammonemia deficiency of the newborn Urea Cycle Defects  Early respiratory alkalosis  Marked elevation of ammonia  Abnormal plasma amino acids Urea Cycle AA NH3 Urea Urea Cycle Defects  Ornithine-transcarbamylase (OTC)  Carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPS)  Immediate transfer for hemodialysis  10% glucose & lipids 1 g/kg  Minimal proteins  Essential amino acids (0.25 g/kg)  Sodium benzoate 250 mg/kg  Hippuric  Sodium acid phenylacetate 250 mg/kg  Phenylacetylglutamine Organic Acidemia (OAs)  Methylmalonic acidemia  Propionic acidemia  Isovaleric acidemia  Severe acidosis  Ketosis  Hyperammonemia  Seizures  Unusual odor (urine)  Neutropenia  Thrombocytopenia  Urine organic acid  Hydration  Glucose infusion  Bicarbonate Lactic Acidosis  Small for gestational age  Dysmorphic features  Multiorgan disease  Seizures  Lactate/pyruvate  Elevated ratio anion gap  Arterial specimen Galactosemia  Not manifest until galactose is introduced  Most formulas contain lactose  No galactose in soy formulas  Vomiting  Lethargy or irritability  Feeding difficulties  Poor weight gain  Convulsion  Jaundice  Hepatomegaly  Hypoglycemia  Mental Retardation  Hepatic Cirrhosis  E. coli Sepsis * Reducing substances in urine * Must be done before transfusion Phenylketonuria  Phenylalanine  Normal hydroxylase at birth  Mental retardation  Gradual  Vomiting onset  Fair skin  Blue eyes  Seborrhea or eczema  Hypertonia  Seizure  Guthrie test  Phenylalanine  48-72 hrs  After protein feeding Maple Syrup Disease  Decarboxylase  Branched  Leucine chain amino acids (neurotoxic)  Isoleucine  Valine  Precedes screening test results  Normal at birth  First week  May present as early as 24 hours  Feeding intolerance  Lethargy  Hypotonia  Posturing  Seizures  Typical odor  Burnt sugar or caramelized sugar  May not be prominent  Metabolic  Late acidosis finding  Hypoglycemia  No improvement after correction Newborn Screening         Phenylketonuria Maple Syrup Urine Disease Galactosemia Homocystinuria Hypothyroidism Sickle cell disease Biotinidase deficiency HIV Case #2  4-week-old-term infant presented fussy, crying & irritable  Vomited greenish material  Tachycardia  Slightly distended abdomen Malrotation &Volvulus     First 2 months Intense & constant pain  Crying, drawing up their knees  Poor feeding Bilious vomiting Abdominal distension  No distension in high volvolus Case # 3       4-week-old presented fussy with decreased appetite Cyanotic;does not respond to O2 Tachycardic Grunting respiration No hepatomegaly Normal Chest X-ray Methemoglobinemia  Uncommon cause of cyanosis  Can be a cause of death  Ferric rather than ferrous  Impaired oxygen binding of Hb  Hemoglobin M  Hemoglobin reductase  Drugs (benzocaine-Orajel)  Idiopathic (70%)  Symptoms depend on the concentration of methemoglobin  10-30%  30-50%  50-70%  >70% Cyanosis Tachycardia, fatigue Lethargy, stupor Death  Cyanosis without cardiac or pulmonary disease  Oxygen-unresponsive cyanosis  Cyanosis out of proportion to symptoms  Chocolate brown blood  Pulse oximeter read 90s%  Normal PaO2 despite cyanosis < 30%  30-70%  No response Not needed Methylene blue Hyperbaric O2 Exchange transfusion  Methylene blue 1 mg/kg IV  10 ml 1% ampule (10 mg/ml)  Reduce methHb to hemoglobin  Maximum effect in 30 minutes  Ineffective in G-6PD deficiency  Hemolysis in G-6PD deficiency  Alter the pulse oximeter reading Case #4  7-day-old term infant  Poky eater; eats and stops  Crying & irritable after eating < 1 oz  Acts hungry & wants to eat again  Bounding pulse in upper extremity  Weak/or no pulses in lower extremities Congenital Heart Defects First week  Hypoplastic left heart syndrome  TGA  TAPVR  Coarctation of aorta First month  Coarctation of aorta  VSD  AV canal malformation Ductal dependent lesions  Coarctation of aorta  Hypoplastic left heart syndrome  TGA  Tricuspid atresia  Pulmonary atresia  with intact ventricular septum  Critical pulmonary stenosis Prostaglandin E1 0.3 X Kg = Number of mg to be added in 50 ml 0.5 ml/hr will deliver 0.05 microgram/kg/min  Recognize life-threatening conditions  Initiate therapy even before precise conditions  Prostaglandin E1  0.05 - 0.1 microgram/kg/min  Apnea  Bradycardia  Hypotension  Seizures  Hyperthermia Coarctation of Aorta  Decreased lower limb pulses  Acute cardiovascular collapse  Differential cyanosis TGA  5% of all CHD  Aorta from RV  Pulmonary artery from LV  Ductus closure  minimal mixing of the systemic & pulmonary blood via foramen ovale  Hypoxemia  Cyanosis  Tachypnea  Murmur may be absent  “Egg on a stick appearance” Hypoplsatic left heart  Both cyanotic & acyanotic  25% of all cardiac deaths in 1st wk  Pallor  Tachypnea  Poor perfusion  grayish  Poor blue color to absent peripheral pulses  No murmur  Hepatomegaly  Metabolic acidosis Case # 5  6-week-old-full-term-infant  Irritability  During  Pallor & poor feeding few days feeding & breathlessness  Irritable  Crying-not consolable  HR 160, R 50, T 990 F  Intermittent grunting  O2 saturation 97%  Pale, cool extremities  Clear lung fields  Palpable liver 4 cm  4 extremities pulse & BP equal Anomalous Origin of LCA  Pulmonary Artery  Low pressure  Desaturated blood  Myocardial ischemia 2 weeks to 6 months  Restlessness, irritability  Incessant crying  Dyspnea  Pallor & sweating (> feeding)  Congestive cardiac failure  Tachypnea  Tachycardia  Cardiomegaly  Hepatomegaly  Q-wave in I, aVL & left precordium  Persistent ST-elevation  T-wave inversion Case # 6  6-day-old girl, lethargic  Vomiting all night  Extremely irritable  Enlarged clitoris with local hairs Adrenal Hyperplasia Inborn errors of adrenal steroid  Acute salt-losing crisis    2 - 5 weeks Ambiguous genitalia  21-hydroxylase  90% deficiency of all cases  1 in 15,000 live births  Male  Appears normal at birth  Sexual precocity appears in 6 months  Large phallus  Dark skin & mucous membrane  Female  Enlarged clitoris  Labial fusion  Virilization  Electrolytes Na+  High K+  Low  Glucose  Adrenal steroid profile  17-hydroxyprogesterone  Markedly elevated  Obtain before hydrocortisone administration  Fluid & Electrolyte replacement  Urgent  20 ml/kg Normal Saline  Hydrocortisone  25 mg IV bolus  50 mg/m2/24 hours  Hyperkalemia  Far better tolerated  Volume restoration  Insulin & glucose contraindicated Case # 7  3-year-old previously healthy girl  Breathing fast  6 vomiting in 2 hours  Lethargic 100.30 F, HR 156, R 60  Clear lung fields  Glucose 69 T  Na 144 K 6  Cl 110  Urea 27  pH  PCO2  HCO3  Base deficit  Salicylate 7.45 12 8 12 level 98 mg/dl Salicylate poisoning  Tachypnea & respiratory alkalosis  Metabolic acidosis  Fever  Seizure  Coma Case # 8  15-month-old girl- fever & vomiting  Sleepy but arousable  Lethargic  Intermittent cry followed by vomiting  RUQ tenderness  Scant bowel sounds  Guaic negative stool Intussusception  Sudden onset  Triad  Vomiting  Colicky abdominal pain  Heme-positive stool (“currant jelly”)  Target sign  Soft tissue mass with 2 concentric circles of fat density  Absence of cecal gas & stool  Loss of visualization of tip of liver  Paucity of bowel gas (RLQ)  Normal abdominal radiographs do not rule out intussusception 3 months to 6 years  80% under 2 years  Male:female 4:1  Adenoviruses (spring)  Rotaviruses (summer)  Rotavirus vaccine  Fluid resuscitation is important  All patients are hypovolemic  Barium enema  Diagnostic  Air & therapeutic enema  Increased success  Lower complications & radiation Child Abuse  Intracranial hemorrhage  Inconsistent history  High index of suspicion Take home message  The “septic appearing infant” is septic until proven otherwise but think beyond!  Key to diagnosis is high index of suspicion  “Eyes can not see what the mind does not know”
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            