Pathophysiology - Guts Under Siege

NEC is multifactorial, rooted in a triad of insults targeting the vulnerable premature intestine:
- Intestinal Ischemia: Reduced blood flow from events like perinatal asphyxia or shock compromises mucosal integrity.
- Enteral Feeding: Particularly formula, provides a substrate for pathogenic bacteria to proliferate.
- Bacterial Translocation: An immature gut barrier and abnormal colonization allow bacteria to invade the bowel wall.
This combination unleashes an uncontrolled inflammatory cascade (↑ PAF, TNF-α), leading to coagulative necrosis and potential perforation.
⭐ High-Yield: The terminal ileum and proximal ascending colon are the most commonly affected sites.
Risk Factors & Prevention - Hedging the Bets
-
Major Risk Factors:
- Prematurity & VLBW/ELBW (single biggest risk)
- Formula feeding (vs. human milk)
- Birth asphyxia & shock
- Congenital heart disease (esp. PDA)
- Umbilical catheterization
-
Protective Measures:
- Antenatal steroids
- Exclusive human milk diet
- Probiotics (e.g., Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium)
⭐ An exclusive human milk diet is the single most effective preventive measure, reducing NEC risk by over 50%.
Clinical Features & Labs - The Telltale Signs
- Systemic Signs: Often subtle and non-specific. Includes lethargy, apnea, bradycardia, and temperature instability.
- Gastrointestinal (GI) Signs: More specific indicators.
- Feeding intolerance (vomiting, increased gastric residuals).
- Abdominal distension and tenderness.
- Hematochezia (bright red blood in stools).
- Lab Findings: Key markers of inflammation and metabolic derangement.
- Metabolic acidosis
- Thrombocytopenia (platelets < 100,000/mm³)
- Hyponatremia
- Elevated C-Reactive Protein (CRP)
⭐ Abdominal distension is the most common and often the earliest clinical sign of NEC.
Imaging & Staging - X-Ray Clues
Abdominal X-ray is the primary imaging modality for diagnosis and staging, based on Modified Bell's criteria.

| Stage | Classification | Key X-Ray Findings |
|---|---|---|
| I | Suspected NEC | Normal or mild, non-specific ileus. |
| II | Proven NEC | Pneumatosis intestinalis (hallmark); portal venous gas. > ⭐ Pneumatosis intestinalis (gas in the bowel wall) is the pathognomonic radiological sign for NEC. |
| III | Advanced NEC | Pneumoperitoneum (indicates perforation). |
- Pneumoperitoneum is a surgical emergency.
Management - The Action Plan
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Medical Management: Initiate supportive care immediately.
- NPO (Nil Per Os), IV fluids, and nasogastric decompression.
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics (e.g., Ampicillin + Gentamicin + Metronidazole).
- Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) for nutritional support.
-
Surgical Management:
⭐ Pneumoperitoneum on an abdominal X-ray is an absolute indication for immediate surgical intervention.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Most common gastrointestinal emergency in neonates, primarily affecting preterm infants.
- Pneumatosis intestinalis (gas in the bowel wall) is the pathognomonic sign on abdominal X-ray.
- Bell's staging is crucial for classifying severity and guiding management.
- Management cornerstone is bowel rest (NPO), broad-spectrum antibiotics, and supportive care.
- Pneumoperitoneum indicates bowel perforation, an absolute indication for surgery.
- The terminal ileum and proximal colon are the most commonly affected sites.
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