๐ Highly Important for Pediatric Nursing, Community Health Nursing, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, GPSC, AIIMS, Staff Nurse Exams
Failure to Thrive (FTT) is a condition in infants and young children in which physical growth is significantly below expected standards for age and sex, primarily involving weight and, in severe cases, height and head circumference.
โณ๏ธ FTT is a clinical presentation, not a disease โ it reflects an underlying issue in nutrition, absorption, metabolism, or psychosocial care.
๐ก Weight consistently below the 3rd or 5th percentile
๐ก Weight-for-age or weight-for-length that drops by 2 or more percentile lines
๐ก Growth velocity (rate of weight gain) that is abnormally slow
๐ก Delayed head circumference (in chronic/severe FTT)
Type | Cause | Examples |
---|---|---|
๐ฅ Organic FTT | Underlying medical/physical illness | Congenital heart disease, chronic renal failure, HIV |
๐จ Non-Organic FTT | Environmental/psychosocial issues | Neglect, poverty, improper feeding, emotional deprivation |
๐ฉ Mixed FTT | Combination of both | Mild GI issue + poor caregiving or stress in family |
๐ธ Premature or low-birth-weight infant
๐ธ Multiple siblings with limited family resources
๐ธ Teenage or single mothers
๐ธ Parental mental illness or substance use
๐ธ Institutionalized children
Nutritional deficiency โ โ calorie/protein intake โ โ weight gain โ altered immune function โ developmental delays โ emotional & behavioral changes
System | Features |
---|---|
๐ง General | Failure to gain weight, thin limbs, wasted buttocks |
๐จ Skin | Dry, loose skin, pallor, skin breakdown |
๐ฉ Neurological | Developmental delay, poor social responsiveness |
๐ฆ Behavioral | Irritability, excessive sleep or apathy, poor eye contact |
๐ฅ Feeding | Feeding difficulties, vomiting, refusal to eat, poor suck |
๐ฌ Anthropometric Assessments
๐ฌ Laboratory Investigations (as per clinical suspicion):
๐ฌ Developmental Screening Tools:
โ Developmental delays
โ Severe protein-energy malnutrition (e.g., marasmus)
โ Immune suppression โ recurrent infections
โ Psychosocial deprivation
โ Long-term cognitive impairment
๐จ FTT = Weight < 3rd percentile or crossing 2 percentile lines downward
๐จ Organic = Disease-related | Non-organic = Environment or care-related
๐จ Growth chart = best diagnostic & monitoring tool
๐จ Mixed FTT is most common in clinical practice
๐จ Nurse’s major roles: Education, feeding guidance, follow-up
Q1. What percentile is used to define FTT in infants?
๐
ฐ๏ธ 10th
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ 3rd
๐
ฒ๏ธ 25th
๐
ณ๏ธ 50th
Correct Answer: ๐
ฑ๏ธ 3rd
Q2. Which of the following is an organic cause of FTT?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Child neglect
๐
ฑ๏ธ Improper feeding
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Congenital heart disease
๐
ณ๏ธ Maternal depression
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Congenital heart disease
Q3. What is the most reliable tool to assess FTT?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Urine test
๐
ฑ๏ธ Blood culture
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Growth chart
๐
ณ๏ธ Skin fold thickness
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Growth chart
Q4. A key symptom in FTT is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Obesity
๐
ฑ๏ธ Jaundice
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Developmental delay
๐
ณ๏ธ Fever
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Developmental delay
Q5. Nursing care in FTT includes all EXCEPT:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Educating caregivers
๐
ฑ๏ธ Encouraging structured feeding
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Using physical restraints
๐
ณ๏ธ Monitoring weight
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Using physical restraints
Q6. Which vitamin supplementation is critical in FTT cases?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Vitamin A
๐
ฑ๏ธ Vitamin D
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Multivitamins including iron and zinc
๐
ณ๏ธ Vitamin K
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Multivitamins including iron and zinc
Q7. Best way to ensure feeding compliance in non-organic FTT is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Strict hospital rules
๐
ฑ๏ธ Sedatives
๐
ฒ๏ธ Caloric restriction
โ
๐
ณ๏ธ Parental counseling and support
Correct Answer: ๐
ณ๏ธ Parental counseling and support
๐ Highly Important for Pediatric Nursing, Community Health Nursing, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, GPSC, AIIMS, Staff Nurse Exams
Diarrhea in infancy is defined as the frequent passage of loose or watery stools, usually three or more times in 24 hours, which may be acute or chronic and is often associated with dehydration and malnutrition.
โณ๏ธ Not every frequent stool is diarrhea โ it must be unusually loose and exceed normal pattern for that infant.
Type | Duration | Causes |
---|---|---|
๐ฅ Acute Diarrhea | < 14 days | Viral (e.g., Rotavirus), bacterial, food infection |
๐จ Persistent Diarrhea | โฅ 14 days | Infection, malnutrition |
๐ฉ Chronic Diarrhea | โฅ 30 days | Malabsorption, lactose intolerance, celiac disease |
๐ฆ Dysentery | Bloody diarrhea | Shigella, E. coli |
๐น Poor hygiene practices
๐น Unsafe drinking water
๐น Improper weaning practices
๐น Malnutrition
๐น Bottle feeding
๐น Incomplete immunization (e.g., rotavirus)
System | Signs & Symptoms |
---|---|
๐ง GI Tract | Frequent loose/watery stools, foul smell, greenish/yellowish color |
๐ง Dehydration | Sunken eyes, dry mouth, poor skin turgor, decreased urine output |
๐ฆ General | Fever, vomiting, irritability, lethargy, weight loss |
๐จ Severe | Hypovolemic shock, sunken fontanelle, delayed capillary refill |
Severity | Key Signs |
---|---|
๐ฉ No Dehydration | Normal skin turgor, eyes not sunken, drinks normally |
๐จ Some Dehydration | Irritable, thirsty, sunken eyes, delayed skin pinch |
๐ฅ Severe Dehydration | Lethargy, unable to drink, very sunken eyes, weak pulse |
Most cases are clinically diagnosed and treated empirically.
โ Severe dehydration โ Hypovolemic shock
โ Electrolyte imbalance โ seizures
โ Malnutrition
โ Recurrent infections
โ Growth faltering
๐ก Most common cause of infantile diarrhea = Rotavirus
๐ก ORS + Zinc = Gold standard treatment
๐ก Continue feeding and breastfeeding during diarrhea
๐ก Use of antibiotics is limited and specific
๐ก Assess dehydration by skin turgor, eyes, drinking ability
Q1. Most common cause of diarrhea in infants is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ E. coli
๐
ฑ๏ธ Shigella
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Rotavirus
๐
ณ๏ธ Giardia
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Rotavirus
Q2. Key component of diarrhea management is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Antibiotics
๐
ฑ๏ธ Antiemetics
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ ORS
๐
ณ๏ธ Sedation
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ ORS
Q3. Zinc supplementation in infants <6 months is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ 5 mg/day
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ 10 mg/day
๐
ฒ๏ธ 20 mg/day
๐
ณ๏ธ 30 mg/day
Correct Answer: ๐
ฑ๏ธ 10 mg/day
Q4. A sign of some dehydration is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Lethargy
๐
ฑ๏ธ Unconsciousness
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Thirsty, irritable
๐
ณ๏ธ Urine retention
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Thirsty, irritable
Q5. Which of the following is NOT advised in infant diarrhea?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Continue breastfeeding
๐
ฑ๏ธ Administer ORS
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Stop feeding
๐
ณ๏ธ Give zinc supplements
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Stop feeding
Q6. ORS solution should be used within:
๐
ฐ๏ธ 2 hours
๐
ฑ๏ธ 6 hours
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 24 hours
๐
ณ๏ธ 48 hours
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ 24 hours
Q7. Which parasite commonly causes chronic diarrhea?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Shigella
๐
ฑ๏ธ Norovirus
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Giardia lamblia
๐
ณ๏ธ Vibrio cholera
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Giardia lamblia
๐ Essential for Pediatric Nursing, Community Health Nursing, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, GPSC, AIIMS, Staff Nurse Exams
Vomiting in infancy is the forceful expulsion of stomach contents through the mouth, commonly due to feeding errors, infections, or congenital abnormalities.
โณ๏ธ Regurgitation โ Vomiting
Regurgitation is passive (normal in infants); vomiting is forceful and abnormal.
Type | Description | Examples |
---|---|---|
๐ฉ Non-bilious Vomiting | Without bile; often due to overfeeding or GERD | Pyloric stenosis, milk intolerance |
๐ฅ Bilious Vomiting | Greenish in color; bile present | Intestinal obstruction, malrotation |
๐จ Projectile Vomiting | Forceful ejection; occurs in arcs | Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis |
๐ฆ Functional Vomiting | Without organic disease | GER, overfeeding |
โ Bilious or bloody vomitus
โ Projectile vomiting
โ Poor feeding, lethargy
โ Dehydration signs
โ Abdominal distension
โ Fever or convulsions
โ Weight loss
Feature | Observation |
---|---|
๐ฉ Mild | Occasional vomiting, no distress, active feeding |
๐ฅ Moderate | Frequent vomiting, mild dehydration, irritability |
๐จ Severe | Projectile/bilious vomiting, lethargy, sunken eyes, weight loss |
๐งฌ History & Physical Exam โ timing, frequency, relation to feeding
๐งช Blood tests โ CBC, electrolytes
๐งช Stool culture โ for infections
๐งช Abdominal X-ray / USG โ rule out obstruction, pyloric stenosis
๐งช Urine analysis โ for UTI
๐งช Neurological assessment โ if signs of ICP present
โ Dehydration
โ Aspiration pneumonia
โ Electrolyte imbalance
โ Malnutrition
โ Metabolic alkalosis (e.g., in pyloric stenosis)
๐ก Vomiting โ regurgitation โ vomiting is forceful
๐ก Bilious vomiting = suspect obstruction
๐ก Projectile vomiting = classic of pyloric stenosis
๐ก GER = common cause of functional vomiting
๐ก Nurse must monitor dehydration and educate caregivers
Q1. Which of the following is a danger sign in infant vomiting?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Spitting after feeding
๐
ฑ๏ธ Passing normal stools
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Bilious vomiting
๐
ณ๏ธ Belching
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Bilious vomiting
Q2. Projectile vomiting in an infant suggests:
๐
ฐ๏ธ GER
๐
ฑ๏ธ Milk allergy
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Pyloric stenosis
๐
ณ๏ธ Intussusception
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Pyloric stenosis
Q3. Vomiting due to overfeeding is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Bilious
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Non-bilious
๐
ฒ๏ธ Projectile
๐
ณ๏ธ Bloody
Correct Answer: ๐
ฑ๏ธ Non-bilious
Q4. First action in infant vomiting with mild dehydration:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Give antibiotics
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Give ORS and observe
๐
ฒ๏ธ Start IV fluids
๐
ณ๏ธ Do surgery
Correct Answer: ๐
ฑ๏ธ Give ORS and observe
Q5. Key difference between regurgitation and vomiting is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Vomiting is normal
๐
ฑ๏ธ Regurgitation is forceful
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Vomiting is forceful; regurgitation is passive
๐
ณ๏ธ Both need hospitalization
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Vomiting is forceful; regurgitation is passive
Q6. Which investigation confirms hypertrophic pyloric stenosis?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Urine test
๐
ฑ๏ธ Stool culture
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Abdominal ultrasound
๐
ณ๏ธ ECG
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Abdominal ultrasound
Q7. Best nursing position after feeding a vomiting-prone infant:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Supine
๐
ฑ๏ธ Prone
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Upright for 20โ30 mins
๐
ณ๏ธ Trendelenburg
Correct Answer: ๐
ฒ๏ธ Upright for 20โ30 mins