A mother arrives to your office in a panic. She had just returned home from the delivery of her third child, who was born by cesarean section because he was large for gestation age. Upon changing his first diaper at home she noticed gross blood in his diaper. On examination, you find a left-sided abdominal mass that was not present in the normal newborn nursery. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in the diagnosis and management of this child?

Correct Answer: Renal ultrasound with renal vein Doppler studies
Description: The child in the question likely has renal vein thrombosis, a condition more commonly seen in infants who are dehydrated, had birth depression, have polycythemia or were born to diabetic mothers. The child in the case was large for gestational age, a hint that gestational diabetes might have been present and which also can result in polycythemia. Children with renal vein thrombosis can present with history of oliguria and hematuria, and on examination enlarged kidneys may be palpable. Confirmation of the diagnosis is by renal ultrasound with renal vein Doppler studies. UTI in a 3-day- old infant is unusual, and the presentation with abdominal mass without temperature instability is unlikely making a urine catheterization and intravenous antibiotics a lower priority. Abdominal tumors such as Wilms or neuroblastoma are less likely in such a young infant making CT scans or urine catecholamine measurements a lesser priority.
Category: Pediatrics
Share:

Get More
Subject Mock Tests

Practice with over 200,000 questions from various medical subjects and improve your knowledge.

Attempt a mock test now
Mock Exam

Take an exam with 100 random questions selected from all subjects to test your knowledge.

Coming Soon
Get More
Subject Mock Tests

Try practicing mock tests with over 200,000 questions from various medical subjects.

Attempt a mock test now
Mock Exam

Attempt an exam of 100 questions randomly chosen from all subjects.

Coming Soon
WordPress › Error

There has been a critical error on this website.

Learn more about troubleshooting WordPress.