Failure to Thrive Due to Neglect

Failure to Thrive Due to Neglect

Failure to Thrive Due to Neglect

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FTT Basics - Defining the Dwindle

  • Definition (FTT):
    • Weight <3rd-5th percentile for age.
    • Crossing >2 major percentile lines downwards.
    • Weight for length/height <3rd-5th percentile.
  • Types:
    • Organic: Underlying medical cause.
    • Non-Organic (NFTT): No medical cause; often neglect-related.
      • Criteria: Psychosocial factors, poverty, poor caregiver-child interaction.
    • Mixed.
  • Growth Parameters Affected (Order): Weight (first) $\rightarrow$ Height $\rightarrow$ Head Circumference (late, ominous). 📌 W-H-HC. Boys Growth Chart: Length-for-age and Weight-for-age

⭐ Weight is the most sensitive indicator of acute malnutrition and is affected first in FTT.

Neglect's Shadow - Why Kids Falter

  • Primary Cause: Persistent inadequate caloric intake due to insufficient food quantity/quality or unaddressed feeding difficulties stemming from neglect.
  • Key Contributing Factors:
    • Lack of emotional bonding, maternal depression, parental substance abuse.
    • Child neglect (emotional, physical, nutritional).
  • Pathophysiology:
    • Caloric deprivation → ↓ metabolic rate → arrested physical growth.
    • Psychosocial deprivation → ↑ stress hormones (e.g., cortisol) → impaired growth.
  • Vicious Cycle: Malnourished child becomes irritable/apathetic → further impairs parent-child bonding → worsens neglect and feeding issues.

⭐ 'Psychosocial dwarfism' is a severe form of Non-Organic Failure to Thrive (NFTT) characterized by reversible growth hormone deficiency due to profound emotional deprivation.

Red Flags & Clues - Spotting Neglect's Mark

  • Growth Chart:
    • Weight falters first, then height; head circumference initially preserved.
    • Rapid catch-up growth with refeeding is key.
  • Physical Signs:
    • Wasting (↓ subcutaneous fat, muscle), thin limbs, prominent ribs, scaphoid abdomen.
    • Dry skin, sparse hair.
  • Behavioral Signs:
    • Apathy, listlessness, poor eye contact, developmental delay.
    • Abnormal feeding (rumination, food refusal/hoarding).
    • Lack of stranger anxiety or indiscriminate friendliness.
  • Caregiver Clues:
    • Indifference, hostility, depression, missed appointments, poor hygiene.
  • 📌 Mnemonic: WATCH
    • Weight loss
    • Apathy
    • Thin
    • Caregiver issues
    • Hygiene poor

⭐ A key indicator of NFTT is rapid 'catch-up growth' with adequate nutrition and a nurturing environment, often seen during hospitalization.

Causes & evaluation of short statureoka

Intervention & Law - Healing & Protecting

  • Management Strategy:
    • Nutritional Rehabilitation: Provide high-calorie diet, targeting 120-150 kcal/kg/day for effective catch-up growth.
    • Multidisciplinary Team: Essential; includes pediatrician, nutritionist, social worker, psychologist.
    • Addressing Neglect: Focus on parental counseling, comprehensive education, and robust support services.
    • Hospitalization: Necessary for severe malnutrition, diagnostic uncertainty, or to ensure child safety.
  • Medico-legal Framework (India):
    • Mandatory Reporting: Suspected child neglect must be reported to authorities.
    • Child Welfare Committee (CWC): Plays a central role under the Juvenile Justice Act.
    • POCSO Act: Applicable if any form of sexual abuse is also suspected or confirmed.

⭐ In India, doctors have a legal obligation to report suspected child abuse and neglect to the Child Welfare Committee (CWC) or local police.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • FTT Criteria: Weight < 3rd-5th percentile or crossing 2 major percentiles downwards on growth charts.
  • Dominant Etiology: Non-organic FTT, often from psychosocial neglect, is the most common type.
  • Growth Impact Sequence: Weight affected first, then length/height, lastly head circumference (relatively spared).
  • Hallmark of Reversal: Significant "catch-up growth" with adequate nutritional and emotional support.
  • Key Clinical Signs: Apathy, poor hygiene, developmental delays, and abnormal child-caregiver interactions.
  • Core Intervention: Multidisciplinary approach focusing on nutrition, parental education, and ensuring child safety.
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Practice Questions: Failure to Thrive Due to Neglect

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A 5-year-old has the following anthropometry findings: Weight/age < -3.2 SD, Height/age < -2.5 SD, Weight/height < -1.7 SD. What is the most likely diagnosis?

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_____ fracture is a feature of Battered baby syndrome

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