Teratology Principles - Agents of Chaos
- Teratology: Study of birth defects. Teratogen: Agent causing malformations.
- Key Principles (Wilson's):
- Susceptibility (genotype, timing).
- Specific mechanisms.
- Dose-response relationship.
- Outcomes: Death, malformation, growth issues, functional deficits.
- Critical Periods:
- 3rd-8th week (organogenesis): Peak sensitivity.
- <3rd week: All-or-none.
-
8th week (fetal): Growth/functional defects.
- Teratogens: Drugs (e.g., thalidomide), Infections (TORCH), Radiation, Maternal factors (diabetes).

⭐ The most critical period for teratogenesis is the 3rd to 8th week of gestation (embryonic period/organogenesis).
Neural Tube Defects - Brainy Blunders
- Failure of neural tube (NT) closure (3rd-4th week gestation).
- Risks: Folic acid deficiency, maternal diabetes, valproate.
- Prevention: Folic acid 0.4 mg/day (general), 4 mg/day (prior NTD).
- Diagnosis: ↑AFP (maternal serum/amniotic fluid), ↑AChE (amniotic fluid), ultrasound.
- Types:
- Anencephaly: No forebrain/skull vault; polyhydramnios.
- Encephalocele: Brain/meninges herniation via skull defect.
- Spina Bifida:
- Occulta: Vertebral defect, asymptomatic, hairy patch/dimple.
- Meningocele: Meninges + CSF herniation.
- Myelomeningocele: Meninges + neural tissue; neuro deficits, Arnold-Chiari II common.
⭐ Anencephaly is characterized by absence of the forebrain and calvarium, and is incompatible with life.

Congenital Heart Defects - Broken Hearts
⭐ Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD) is the most common congenital heart defect overall.
- CHDs: Structural defects of heart/great vessels present at birth due to abnormal embryogenesis. Key classification based on presence or absence of cyanosis.
| Feature | Acyanotic (L→R Shunt) | Cyanotic (R→L Shunt) |
|---|---|---|
| Examples | VSD, ASD, PDA | ToF, TGA, Truncus Arteriosus, Tricuspid Atresia, TAPVR |
| Shunt Direction | Left-to-Right | Right-to-Left |
| Cyanosis | Late (Eisenmenger syndrome) | Early |
| PBF | ↑ Pulmonary Blood Flow | Variable/↓ PBF (often) |
- **P**ulmonary stenosis
- **R**ight ventricular hypertrophy (RVH)
- **O**verriding aorta
- **V**entricular septal defect (VSD)
- Boot-shaped heart on CXR (ToF).

GI & GU Anomalies - Gut & Groin Goofs
- Gut Rotation & Wall Defects:
- Malrotation: Ladd's bands, volvulus risk.
- Omphalocele: Midline, sac-covered, ↑AFP, associated anomalies.
- Gastroschisis: Right of umbilicus, no sac, ↑AFP, isolated.
- Atresias & Stenosis:
- Duodenal atresia: "Double bubble" sign, Down syndrome.
- Pyloric stenosis: Non-bilious projectile vomiting, palpable olive.
- GU Anomalies:
- Hypospadias: Ventral meatus. Epispadias: Dorsal meatus.
- Horseshoe kidney: Fused inferior poles, trapped by IMA.
- 📌 POTTER sequence: Pulmonary hypoplasia, Oligohydramnios, Twisted face/skin, Extremity defects, Renal agenesis.

⭐ Meckel's diverticulum: Rule of 2s (2% pop, 2ft from ICV, 2in long, 2% symptomatic, 2 types ectopic tissue - gastric/pancreatic).
Craniofacial & Limb Defects - Awkward Arms & Faces
- Craniofacial Defects:
- Cleft Lip: Failure of maxillary & medial nasal prominences to fuse.
- Cleft Palate: Failure of palatal shelves to fuse.
- Craniosynostosis: Premature cranial suture fusion (e.g., scaphocephaly).
- Holoprosencephaly: Incomplete forebrain division; severe facial anomalies.
- Limb Defects:
- Amelia: Complete limb absence.
- Meromelia: Partial limb absence.
- Phocomelia: Hands/feet near trunk (📌 Seal limbs); e.g., thalidomide.
- Syndactyly: Fused digits.
- Polydactyly: Extra digits.

⭐ Cleft lip results from failure of fusion of the maxillary prominence with the medial nasal prominence.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Neural tube defects (NTDs) are linked to maternal folate deficiency.
- TORCH infections are major causes of congenital malformations.
- Fetal Alcohol Syndrome presents with characteristic facial dysmorphism and growth restriction.
- Down syndrome (Trisomy 21), commonest aneuploidy, causes intellectual disability, cardiac defects.
- Potter sequence from oligohydramnios causes pulmonary hypoplasia, limb deformities.
- DiGeorge syndrome (22q11.2 deletion): features CATCH-22 (Cardiac, Abnormal facies, Thymic aplasia, Cleft palate, Hypocalcemia).
- Teratogens cause defects during critical periods of organogenesis (e.g., thalidomide, phocomelia).
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