Congenital Heart Defects
Cardiac Emergencies & Meds
GI Disorders
Renal & Urinary Conditions
Newborn & GI Structural Problems
100

This defect causes a machine-like murmur, bounding pulses, and a wide pulse pressure

What is Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA)? 

100

Early signs of toxicity from this medication include vomiting and bradycardia.

What is digoxin?

100

Projectile, non-bilious vomiting and an olive-shaped mass in the RUQ indicate this disorder.

What is pyloric stenosis?

100

This infection commonly presents with fever, vomiting, dysuria, or abdominal pain in children.

What is a UTI?

100

A baby with a cleft palate needs this feeding position to reduce aspiration.

What is upright feeding?

200

This Left to Right shunt presents with a Ejection systolic murmur and frequent respiratory infections.

What is Atrial Septal Defect (ASD)? 

200

Position used during a Tet spell to increase systemic vascular resistance.

What is the knee-chest position?

200

A child with currant jelly stools and intermittent severe abdominal pain likely has this condition.

What is intussusception?

200

This condition involves backflow of urine from bladder to kidneys and increases UTI risk.

What is Vesicoureteral Reflux (VUR)?

200

This defect presents as intestines outside the body with a membrane sac.

What is omphalocele?


300

This heart defect causes a loud holosystolic murmur, poor feeding, and heart failure symptoms.

What is Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD)?

300

This condition presents with facial edema, tea-colored urine, and hypertension after a strep infection.

What is Acute Post-Infectious Glomerulonephritis (APIGN)?

300

A newborn with bilious vomiting, severe pain, and bowel ischemia has this surgical emergency.

What is volvulus?

300

This syndrome causes massive proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, and generalized edema.

What is Nephrotic Syndrome?

300

This defect presents as intestines outside the body without a sac, high fluid loss, and inflammation.

What is gastroschisis?

400

This cyanotic defect is remembered by PROVe: Pulmonic Stenosis, RV hypertrophy, Overriding aorta, and VSD. 

What is Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF)? 

400

This shock has symptoms of hypotension, cool skin, tachycardia, and weak pulses due to pump failure.

What is cardiogenic shock?

400

This autoimmune condition causes villous atrophy, malabsorption, anemia, and dermatitis herpetiformis.

What is celiac disease?

400

This condition presents with bloody diarrhea, pallor, AKI, and thrombocytopenia following E. coli infection.

What is Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS)?


400

Pale/white stools, dark urine, hepatomegaly, and high direct bilirubin indicate this condition.

What is biliary atresia?

500

This condition results in severe cyanosis and shock when the PDA closes, and is treated with Prostaglandin E1 and staged surgeries (Norwood --> Glenn --> Fontan)

What is Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS)?

500

This drug must be given cautiously to maintain ductal patency in ductal-dependent CHD and may cause apnea.

What is Prostaglandin E1 (PGE1)?

500

Infants with this condition fail to pass meconium in 24 hours, have ribbon stools, and risk life-threatening enterocolitis.

What is Hirschsprung’s disease?

500

Severe oliguria, altered mental status, and hyperkalemia require this urgent treatment.

What is hemodialysis?

500

This life-threatening complication of Hirschsprung disease involves explosive diarrhea, fever, and distention.

What is enterocolitis?

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