PRIMITIVE REFLEXES
HIGH-YIELD DEFECTS
GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
SAFETY
SURGICAL GI EMERGENCIES
100

Moro (startle)

normal until 4–6 months. Persistence after 6 months = neurological concern.

100

VSD (Ventricular Septal Defect)

Most common CHD — hole between lower chambers. Small ones may close on their own. Large ones cause heart failure: poor feeding, sweating with feeds, rapid breathing.

100

Ages 1–3 years

Gains ~4–5 lbs and 3 inches/year. Physiological anorexia (decreased appetite) is NORMAL — do not force feed.

100

Drowning

leading cause of accidental death ages 1–4. Can drown silently in 2 inches of water. Never leave

near any water source alone.

100

Pyloric Stenosis

Pyloric muscle thickens, blocking food passage. Ages 2–8 weeks, more common in firstborn males. Projectile vomiting immediately after every feeding — baby still hungry after. Olive-shaped mass in RUQ. Metabolic alkalosis from vomiting. Treatment: pyloromyotomy (surgery).

200

Babinski (toes fan when sole stroked)

normal until 12–18 months.

200

PDA (Patent Ductus Arteriosus)

Fetal vessel between aorta and pulmonary artery stays open. Common in

premature infants. 'Machine-like' continuous murmur. Treatment: indomethacin or surgery.

200

Erikson: Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt

toddlers need to do things independently. Saying 'no' is healthy.

Offer safe choices: 'red cup or blue cup?'

200

Choking hazards

hot dogs, grapes, nuts, popcorn, hard candies, coins. Cut food into small pieces.

200

Intussusception

Bowel telescopes into itself, cutting off blood supply. Ages 3 months–3 years. Sudden severe

colicky pain (knees to chest, then fine between spasms), vomiting, then currant jelly stools (blood + mucus).

Emergency — air enema or surgery.

300

Rooting/sucking

3–4 months. Palmar grasp: disappears ~3–4 months.

300

Tetralogy of Fallot (4 defects)

VSD + overriding aorta + pulmonary stenosis + right ventricular hypertrophy.

Cyanotic. Boot-shaped heart on X-ray. 'Tet spells' with crying or exertion.

300

Piaget: Early preoperational stage.

Symbolic thinking begins around 18 months — pretend play starts.

300

Poisoning

lock all medications, cleaning products. Poison Control: 1-800-222-1222.

300

Hirschsprung Disease

Absent ganglion cells in colon — no peristalsis in that section. Newborn fails to pass

meconium within 48 hours. Chronic constipation, abdominal distension, ribbon-like stools. Diagnosis: rectal

biopsy. Treatment: surgery.

400

TET SPELL MANAGEMENT

IMMEDIATELY place in knee-chest position — increases systemic resistance, forces more blood through lungs.

Give O2, call provider. Do NOT lay child flat.

400

Parallel play

toddlers play NEXT TO peers, not WITH them — watching and imitating. This is completely normal.

400

TOILET TRAINING READINESS

Stays dry 2+ hours · Can pull pants up/down · Shows interest and awareness · Follows simple instructions.

Average age 2–3 years. Never force — it backfires.

400

Appendicitis

RLQ pain, low-grade fever, nausea/vomiting, rebound tenderness, McBurney's point. Position of

comfort: right side with knees flexed.


NEVER apply heat to the abdomen — increases blood flow and can cause rupture. Never give enemas or

laxatives. Keep NPO and call surgeon.

500

KAWASAKI DISEASE

Inflammatory disease of blood vessels. Most dangerous complication: coronary artery aneurysms (can cause heart attack in toddlers).

Conjunctivitis (red eyes, no discharge) · Rash (polymorphic) · Adenopathy (cervical nodes) · Strawberry tongue ·

Heat (fever 5+ days >38.5C). Treatment: high-dose aspirin + IVIG.

500

Temper tantrums

peak at 2–3 years. Cause: frustration with communication and limits. Strategy: stay calm,

don't give in, keep child safe, offer choices after tantrum.

500

DEHYDRATION Signs

dry mucous membranes, no tears, sunken eyes and fontanel, decreased urine output (dark urine), poor

skin turgor (tents when pinched), lethargy.

500

Celiac disease

Autoimmune reaction to gluten destroys intestinal villi. Signs: chronic diarrhea, steatorrhea,

weight loss, abdominal bloating, failure to thrive. Treatment: strict lifelong gluten-free diet — even

cross-contamination (shared toaster) causes damage.

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