A
B
C
D
E
100

What is the most common cause of gastroenteritis?

Rotavirus is the most common cause in kids under 5 years. 

100

What is the pathophysiology of Hirschsprungs disease? Please name the cell type involved. 

Lack of ganglionic cells in the colon which causes decreased motility and obstruction. (AKA megacolon). 

This is associated with a family history and congenital defects. 

100

Name three methods/forms/actions/interventions of treatment for gastroenteritis. 

Clear liquid rehydration

Electrolyte replacement

Withhold solid foods no more than 1 day

Hospitalization if severe

IV fluids if severe

No antidiahhreals or antiemetics

Continue breastfeeding infants

Teach hand hygiene and risk factors. 

100

What is the pathophysiology of pyloric stenosis?

The pyloric sphincter muscle hypertrophies, causes edema, and the thickened tissue blocks the drain opening from the stomach. 

100

Discuss methods of helping parents handle cleft lip/palate in their newborn. 

Great job. 

Tell them it wasn't their fault

Assist with breastfeeding-speech therapy consult

Show before-and-after pics of successful repairs

Encourage bonding-emphasize baby's other characteristics

200

Acute gastroenteritis is the leading cause of death in children worldwide. How does gastroenteritis kill kids? What about this causes the pt to die?

DEHYDRATION

200

What two stool characteristics change with/are caused by gastroenteritis?

Increased frequency or decreased consistency of stool. 

200

Name 3 S&S of pyloric stenosis. 

PROJECTILE VOMITING

Vomit only contains breastmilk-no digestive enzymes/bile

Baby is fussy/irritable

Don't gain, or can even lose weight if isn't caught quickly

Smaller and less frequent stools

Dehydration

200

Gastro enteritis can be:

A) Viral

B) Bacterial

C) Parasitic

D) A and B

E) All of the above

E) all of the above. 

Acute gastroenteritis can be viral, bacterial, or parasitic. 

200

Please list 3 nursing responsibilities for a pt with appendicitis. 

Monitor for peritonitis-if the pain suddenly goes away

Help prep pt for surgery

Help answer questions

Post-op: get them up and walking asap as possible, ask if patient is passing gas/has a BM to assess for abdominal function, watch for infection, pt and family education, etc

300

Please list 3 nursing responsibilities for a pt with Hirschsprung's diagnosis. 

STOMA CARE and education

Ask for stoma specialist consult

Abdominal assessment

Infection assessment (esp bc surgery)

Assess for returning gut function and presence of stool

300

After a cleft lip is repaired surgically, what are the two main nursing concerns (you will teach parents about both, so "teaching" is not one of the answers)

Infection

Protecting the suture line-give pain meds, never allow the infant to be prone, keep them from touching it!

300

How is pyloric stenosis diagnosed and treated?

Dx: Ultimately by ULTRASOUND, but initially by S&S and palpation of a "olive-shaped mass" in the URQ of the abdomen. 

Tx: Surgery. Make sure kid is eating well and keeping feeds down. Throwing up one feed is probably okay-call dr to notify- but more than one is a bad sign. 

300

What is the classic sign of intussuception?

The "jelly-like stool" or "black currant jelly"

Stool looks like that because it has mucous and blood. 

S&S also include a fussy baby, abdominal pain, vomiting, and a often palpable mass. 

300

How is intussuception treated? Please state both main treatment and backup method. 

First by rectal air enema which is usually successful, and then by surgery if the enema fails. 

400

Name 4 nursing responsibilities for a pt with intussuception

Abdominal assessment frequently both before and after surgery

Can spontaneously resolve, so if baby starts pooping before surgery call surgeon (doesn't need surgery)

Watch for return of normal gut function post-surgery

Assess for infection

Teach parents about risk for a prevention of infection

Teach parents about possibility of recurrence and how to identify

400

List the three major treatment methods for GE reflux other than surgery. 

Thicken formula

Smaller, more frequent feeds

Position baby upright especially after feedings

(remember to teach family how to bulb suction!)

400

How is Hirschsprungs diagnosed and treated?

Dx: failure to pass meconium causes suspicion, dx upon rectal biopsy showing lack of ganglionic cells. 

Tx: Resection of affected bowel tissue and 1 year temp colostomy. 

400

What is the most common emergency surgery in kids?

Appendectomy-removal of appendix bc of appendicitis. 

400

What are three S&S of appendicitis? Please include the type of pain as one of your three. 

REBOUND pain

Fever

Vomiting

RLQ pain

500

What are the 5 physiologic/anatomical pediatric differences that contribute to GE reflux. 

A short, narrow esophagus

Small stomach capacity

Liquid diet

Immature lower LES

Frequently horizontal

500

What two functions does an un-repaired cleft lip/palate threaten in a developing infant? Hint-this is one reason they try to repair before age 1 year. 

Hearing-because the muscles of the palate help open the middle ear

Speech-because duh 

(Remember this also can harm teeth coming in and pose a risk for ear infection)

500

Name the favorite food of one person present. Someone who is NOT you. 

Idk, ask them if you're right. 

500

When do S&S of pyloric stenosis generally appear?

Age 3-6 weeks. 

Remember this IS congenital, but the S&S don't develop until the blockage is 100%, which typically hits around the infants 3-6th week. 

500

What two pediatric GI disorders pose a risk for aspiration?

GE reflux

Cleft palate

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