Newborn Surgical Conditions: CDH & EA/TEF - Breath & Feed Frights
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Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia (CDH)
- Types: Bochdalek (posterolateral, 85-90% left), Morgagni (anteromedial).
- Presentation: Severe respiratory distress, scaphoid abdomen, ↓ breath sounds, bowel sounds in chest.
- Dx: Antenatal USG; Postnatal CXR (bowel loops in chest, mediastinal shift).
- Management: Intubation, NG decompression, delayed surgery. Prognosis: Lung-to-Head Ratio (LHR) < 1.0 is poor.
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Esophageal Atresia & Tracheoesophageal Fistula (EA/TEF)
- Types: Gross classification; Type C (atresia + distal TEF) most common (~85%).
- Presentation: Maternal polyhydramnios; choking, cyanosis, copious frothy secretions with feeds.
- Dx: Failure to pass NG tube > 10-12 cm; X-ray (coiled tube in pouch); gas in bowel = distal TEF.
- Associations: 📌 VACTERL (Vertebral, Anal, Cardiac, TEF, Renal, Limb).
⭐ Type C EA/TEF (atresia with distal fistula) is the most common variant, accounting for approximately 85% of cases.

Newborn Surgical Conditions: Abdominal Wall & Midgut - Outies & Twisted Guts
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Abdominal Wall Defects
- Management: Sterile wrap, IV fluids, OG/NG tube, antibiotics, surgical repair (primary/staged).
- 📌 Omphalocele: On midline, in sac, Often other anomalies.
- 📌 Gastroschisis: Guts out (no sac), Generally right.
| Feature | Omphalocele | Gastroschisis |
|------------------|-------------------------------------------|-------------------------------------------|
| Location | Midline, umbilical cord on sac | Paraumbilical (usually R), no cord on defect |
| Covering Sac | Present | Absent, bowel exposed |
| Bowel | Usually normal | Often thickened, matted, foreshortened |
| Assoc. Anomalies | Common (~50-70%; cardiac, chromosomal) | Less common (~10-15%); bowel atresia/stenosis |

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Malrotation with Volvulus
- Presentation: Sudden bilious vomiting, abdominal distension, shock.
- Diagnosis: Upper GI series (corkscrew sign); USG (whirlpool sign).
- Management: Emergency laparotomy (Ladd's procedure to de-rotate, divide Ladd's bands, appendectomy).
⭐ Malrotation with volvulus: surgical emergency; delay risks bowel necrosis.
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Duodenal Atresia
- Presentation: Bilious vomiting (hrs of birth), polyhydramnios (maternal).
- Diagnosis: X-ray: "double bubble" sign.
- Associated: Trisomy 21 (~30%).
- Management: Surgical repair (duodenoduodenostomy).
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Flowchart: Neonatal Bilious Vomiting
Newborn Surgical Conditions: Lower GI Obstructions - Blocked Pipes Below
- Jejunoileal Atresia:
- Presentation: Bilious vomiting, abdominal distension, failure to pass meconium.
- Cause: In-utero vascular insult. Types I-IV.
- Dx: X-ray (multiple dilated loops, air-fluid levels, no distal gas).
- Hirschsprung's Disease:
- Patho: Aganglionosis of distal bowel.
- Presentation: Delayed meconium passage (>48hrs), constipation, enterocolitis.
- Dx: Contrast enema (transition zone); Rectal biopsy (gold standard: no ganglion cells).
⭐ Rectal biopsy (absent ganglion cells) is gold standard for Hirschsprung's.
- Anorectal Malformations (ARM):
- Spectrum: Low vs. high; fistula common.
- Presentation: No anal opening, meconium from abnormal site.
- Associations: 📌 VACTERL (Vertebral, Anal, Cardiac, Tracheo-Esophageal, Renal, Limb).
- Dx: Clinical, cross-table lateral X-ray, USG.
- Meconium Ileus:
- Presentation: Abdominal distension, bilious vomiting, failure to pass meconium.
- Strong link: Cystic Fibrosis (CF) - screen.
- Dx: X-ray ("soap bubble"/"ground glass" appearance); Contrast enema (microcolon).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- TEF: Type C most common; polyhydramnios, NG tube coils.
- CDH (Bochdalek): Left-sided, scaphoid abdomen, respiratory distress, pulmonary hypoplasia.
- Omphalocele: Midline, sac present, associated anomalies. Gastroschisis: Right of umbilicus, no sac.
- Duodenal Atresia: "Double bubble" sign, bilious vomiting, associated with Down syndrome.
- Malrotation with Volvulus: Sudden bilious vomiting is emergency; UGI series shows corkscrew sign.
- Hirschsprung's: Delayed meconium passage; aganglionosis on rectal biopsy.
- NEC: Prematurity major risk; pneumatosis intestinalis on X-ray_._
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