My - Failure To Thrive
My - Failure To Thrive
My - Failure To Thrive
• Other considerations
– Genetic abnormalities, congenital infections,
metabolic disorders (storage diseases, amino acid
disorders)
Diagnosis
• Accurately plotting growth charts at every
visit is recommended*
• Assess the trends
• H&P more important than labs
– Most cases in primary care setting are
psychosocial or nonorganic in etiology
History
• Dietary
• Keep a food diary
• If formula fed, is it being prepared correctly?
• When, where, with whom does the child eat?
• PMH
• Illnesses, hospitalizations, reflux, vomiting, stools?
• Social
• Who lives in the home, family stressors, poverty, drugs?
• Family
• Medical condition (or FTT) in siblings, mental illness, stature?
• Pregnancy/Birth
• Substance abuse? postpartum depression?
Changes in growth due to FTT
• early finding
– weight
• late findings
– length
– head circumference
Growth charts of an 8 month old boy with
Non-organic FTT
Physical
• Wt, Ht, HC with the growth chart
Systemic exam
Signs of neglect or abuse
Inappropriate behavior
Physical
• Observe parent-child interactions
– Especially during a feeding session
• How is food or formula prepared?
• Oral motor or swallowing difficulty?
• Is adequate time allowed for feeding?
• Do they cuddle the infant during feeds?
• Is TV or anything else causing a distraction?
Physical Indications of
Non-organic FTT
B
TREATMENT
1) Urgent problems e.g.
electrolyte , infection, dehydration.
2) Nutritional rehabilitation:
catch up growth requirement.
Goal is “catch-up” weight gain
“Organic Cause”
Cause Not
Obvious
Feeding
Disorder
Laboratory Screening or
Tests
Investigati Behavioral
on
or
and
Psychosocial
Managemen Positive Negative
t Etiology
as
Indicated Treatment Malnutrition
and
Multidisciplinary
Services
Prognosis of non-organic FTT
*Retardation (15 - 67%)
*School learning (15 - 67%)
*Behavioral disturbance (28 - 48%)
Persistent disorders of growth
increased susceptibility to infection
CONCLUSION
1) FTT is a SIGN only
2) The most important diagnostic method
is : HISTORY & EXAM.
3) The important of Nutrition for the
brain development in the first 2 years of life.
Top 6 take home points
1. Evaluation of Failure to Thrive involves careful
H&P, observation of feeding session, and
should not include routine lab or other
diagnostic testing
2. Nutritional deprivation in the infant and toddler
age group can have permanent effects on
growth and brain development
3. Treatment can usually occur by the primary
care physician in the outpatient setting.
Top 6 take home points
4. Psychosocial problems predominate as the
causes of FTT in the outpatient setting
5. Treatment goal is to increase energy intake to
1.5 times the basal requirement
6. Earlier intervention may make it easier to
break difficult behavior patterns and reduce
sequelae from malnutrition
References
1. Block RW, Krebs NF. Failure to thrive as a manifestation of child neglect. Pediatrics
2005 Nov; 116(5):1234-7. From National Guidline Clearinghouse –
www.guideline.gov
2. Kirkland, RT. Failure to thrive in children under the age of two. Up to Date:
http://www.utdol.com/utd/content/topic.do?topicKey=gen_pedi/2884&type=P&select
edTitle=6~29 version 14.2, april 2006:pgs 1-8.
3. Krugman SD, Dubowitz H. Failure to thrive. American Family Physician, sept 1
2003. Vol 68 (5).
4. Kane, ML. Pediatric Failure to Thrive. Clinics in Family Practice. Vol 5, #2, June
2003, pages 293-311.
5. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ); Evidence report: Criteria for
Determining Disability in Infants and Children: Failure to thrive. #72, pages 1-54.
http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/
6. Bauchner, H. Failure to thrive, in Behrman: Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics, 17th ed,
chapter 35, 36 - 2004.
7. Rudolf M, Logan S. What is the long term outcome for children who fail to thrive? A
systematic review. In Arch Dis Child 2005;90;925-931.