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Tachycardia
• Exercise
• Anxiety
Pathological tachycardia
• Shock
• High out put states  Fever , anemia ,
hyperthyroidism , beriberi
• Tachy arrythmias  SVT
• Drugs  Thyroxine , nifedipine , atropine ,
catacholamines like adrenaline
Pulse deficit
• PR and HR are counted simultaneously for 1
minute
• In AF and ectopics
Rhythm
• It is the regularity with which one beat follows
other
• Assessed by palpating radial artery
• MC cause in child is sinus arrythmia 
acceleration during inspiration and
deceleration during expiration
Sinus arrhythmia
• Increase in PR with inspiration and decrease in
PR during expiration
• Common in childresn ,athletes
• Sinus arrhythmia may be absent inCCF and
autonomic nueropathy
• Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is a
naturally occurring variation in heart rate that
occurs during a breathing cycle. RSA is also a
measure of parasympathetic nervous system
activity
Mechanism of Sinus arrhythmia
• Primarily due to fluctuations in
parasympathetic output to heart
• Inspiration  stretch receptors in lungs 
vagus  inhibits the Cardio inhibitory area in
the medulla
• The tonic vagal discharge that keeps the heart
rate slow decreases and HR increases
Regularly irregular
• Ventricular bigemini/pulsus bigemini bi -2,
gemini – twins , digitalis toxicity
• Ectopic beat occuring so frequently that there
is one ectopy after each sinus beat
• Alternating strong(sinus) and weak (ectopic)
pulse with compensatory pause
• Other causes  ectopics/extrasystoles , 2nd
degree heart block /any atrial arrhythmia with
fixed block
Irregularly irregular
• AF
• Any atrial arrhythmia with varying AV nodal
conduction
Volume of pulse
Pulsus alternans
Pulsus paradoxus
Pulsus parvus
Pulsus bigemini *
Volume of pulse
• It is the amplitude of movement of arterial
wall against the palpating fingers
• It is the degree of movement of arterial wall
against the palpating fingers
• It depends on stroke volume of the LV and
distensibility of the vessel wall
• It depends on Pulse pressure
High volume pulse
• Bounding pulse
• Anxiety
• After exercise
• Fever
• Anaemia
• Hyperthyroidism
• AV fistula
• Higher SBP +/_ lower DBP
• PDA
• AR
• Early septic shock  warm shock  due to
peripheral Vasodilatation ( here there is fall in
Diastolic BP and hence wider PP )
• Status asthmaticus  as CO2 retenstion  VD
 wide PP bounding
Low volume (Pulsus Parvus )
• Parvus = small
• When PP is narrow
• CCF
• Shock
• Severe AS
• Coarctation of aorta
• Severe MS
Difference in Pulse volume
• Coarctation of aorta  if distal to subclavian
artery  volume will be different between
upper and lower limbs
• If proximal to Left subclavian artery 
diminished Left upper limb pulse
Pulsus alternans
• Alternate volume of pulse beats
• Method  By light palpation of the femoral
artery , with breath held in mid expiration(to
avoid respiratory variation )
• It is exaggerated by standing up (by reducing
the venous return )
• Can be detected by taking BP
• Korotkoff’s sound doubles as the pressure falls
• It is a rare but valuable sign of advanced LVF
• It is due to varying force of LV contraction
Pulsus Paradoxus
• Normally SBP falls during inpiration around 3 –
10 mm Hg
• PP is present when SBP falls by more than 10
mm Hg quiet inspiration
• Using BP apparatus
• Korotkoff’s sounds during inspiration and
expiration
• When difference become >20 it will be
palpable
Causes
• Acute severe asthma
• Cardiac tamponade
• Chronic constrictive pericarditis
• Hypovolemic shock
• Pulmonary embolism
• RV Infarction
• SVC obstruction
• COPD
Reversed Pulsus paradoxus
• Increased BP during inspiration
• HOCM
Water hammer pulse
• Collapsing / Corrigan’s pulse
• AR
• PDA
• Patient’s forearm is gripped using examiner’s
left palm with sufficient pressure so that the
pulse is just palpable
• Arm is lifted using examiner’s right hand
• When a thud will be felt if the pulse is water
hammer
it is toy of sealed
glass tube
containing water
and vacuum
On inversion water
drops through
vacuum to give a
thud
Character of pulse
Pulsus tardus /anacrotic pulse
Pulsus bisferiens
Dicrotic pulse
Jerky pulse
Catacrotic pulse
• It describes the pulse wave form
• Best assessed over carotids
• Because it is closest to the heart
• Wave form is not dampened by multiple
branching
• Pulse wave if faster(5m/s) than actual
movement of blood along the arterial tree(50
cm / sec)
Normal character
• Will have 2 positive waves in systole
1. Percussion wave due to rapid upstroke
2. Tidal wave –due to reflected waves from aortic
bifurcation
3. The end of systole is indicated by a sharp notch
 dicrotic notch
4. Which is followed by a positive wave  Dicrotic
wave
• Dicrotic notch correponds to closure of Aortic
valve
Pulsus tardus
• Tardus  slow
• Slow rising pulse
• AS
because LV takes a much longer time to push
the blood through the stenosed valve
Pulsus bisferiens
• Double peak pulse
• HOCM/ severe AR / AS + AR
• Two peaks both in systole
Dicrotic pulse
• Here also 2 peaks
• One in systole and other in diastole
• Sepsis
• Cardiomyopathy
• Myocarditis
Jerky pulse
• Initial high volume from the left V
• Severe MR
• HOCM  sudden cut off of forward flow by
hypertrophied septum
Radio femoral delay
• Normal lag is 5 ms
• More in coarctation of aorta  femoral pulse
is felt a little later than brachial (0.08 sec)
Vessel wall thickness
• Using three finger method
Blood Pressure
• It is the lateral thrust exerted by the blood
column into the vessel which contains it
• Five phases
• Phase 1  low intensity tapping sounds
• Phase 2  murmur like sound
• Phase 3  higher intensity tapping sound
• Phase 4  Muffling sound
• Phase 5 total disappearance of sound
• When sounds not audible  open and close
the fist
• LL BP  prone position
• SBP >10
• DBP same
• Postural hypotension
• Flush method ???
BP cuff size
• The length of the inflatable bladder should
encircle the arm without over lapping
• The width of the bladder should cover atleast
2/3rd of the length of arm
• Small cuff “super” BP
Recommended bladder size
• Newborns  3 cm
• Infants  5 cm
• Child  7 cm
• Adult  12.5 cm
• The inflatable bag of the cuff is to be 20%
wider than the diameter of the limb on which
it is used
Normal BP
• Newborn  90
• Infants  100
• Preschool  110
• School age  110+2mm for each year above 6
years (till 120)
• Hypertension  >95th centile
• High BP  between 90 – 95th centile
• Normal  90th centile
Hypotension
• Less than the 5th percentile of normal age
• <60 mm Hg in term neonates
• <70 mm Hg in infants
• <70 + 2x mm of Hg (up to 10 years )
• <90 mm Hg in children more than 10 years
Respiration
• Inspiration is an active process by the
diaphragm and intercostals
• Expiration is a passive process by the elastic
recoiling of lungs
• Accessory muscles of inspiration  scaleni
,Pectoralis , trapezius
• Accessory muscles of expiration  Abdominal
muscles and latissimus
Assess
• Rate
• Rhythm
• Type of respiration
Rate
Tachypnoea
• Pneumonia
• Pulmonary edema
• ARDS
• PTE
Bradypnoea
• Raised ICT
• Narcotic poisoning
• Hypothyroidism
Hyperpnoea
• Increase in depth of breathing proportionate
to metabolic demands
• Metabolic acidosis
• Renal failure
Hyperventilation
• Increase in depth of breathing
disproportionate to metabolic demands
• Brainstem lesions
• Hysteria
Rhythm
• Cheyne Stoke’s Breathing
• Biots Breathing
• Apneustic breathing
• Ataxic breathing
• Cogwheel breathing
Cheyne stokes breathing
• Periodic breathing in which periods of apnoea
alternate regularly with periods of
hyperpnoea
• Severe LVF
• Raised ICT
• Narcotic drug poisoning
• Renal failure
Biots breathing
• Apnoea between several shallow or few deep
respirations
• Seen in meningitis
Apneustic breathing
• Pause in full inspiration followed by another
pause in expiration lasting for 2-3 seconds
• Seen in pontine lesions
Ataxic breathing
• Deep and shallow breaths occur randomly
• Medullary lesions
Cogwheel breathing
• Interrupted breathing pattern seen in anxious
individuals
Type
• Physiological
1. Thoracoabdominal  females
2. Abdominothoracic  males
• Pathological
1. Thoracic  Diaphragmatic paralysis ,
peritonitis
2. Abdominal  Pleurisy , COPD
Temperature
• Normal  36.8 +/- 0.4 degree C
• 98.2 +/- 0.7 degree F
• Rectal > Oral > Axillary by 0.5 degree C
• Normal Diurnal variation is 1 degree F
• If placed under tongue  1 min
• If placed under axilla  3 min
• Axilla need to be dry
• Rectal temperature is needed only in rare
cases  sever PEM  rectal thermometer
with a rounded bulb
Patterns
• Continuous
• Remittent
• Intermittent
• Relapsing fever
Continous fever
• Daily fluctuation do not exceed 1 degree C
Remittent
• Exceed above normal but never touches
normal
• Step ladder  typhoid
Intermittent
• Quotidian  if it occurs daily ( JRA)
• Tertian  alternate days 
P.falciparum/ovale/vivax
• Quartan fever  every 3rd day  plasmodium
malaria
• Elevated temperature touches the base line
Relapsing fever
• Febrile episodes are seperated by afebrile
episodes of more than one day
• Eg quartan
• Pel ebstein fever  HL
• Fall by crisis  pneumococcal pneumonia
• Fall gradually  lysis typhoid
• With each degree rise in F , PR rises by 10 and
RR by 4
• Fever with relative bradycardia  Typhoid
fever , also meningitis (raised ICT )
• Viral fever (myocardial involvement )
Hyperpyrexia
• Temperature above 41 degree C
1. Heat stroke
2. Pontine haemorrhage
3. Malaria
4. Septicemia / Meningitis
5. Malingnant hyperthermia  that may occur
in myopathy patients when halothane
anaesthetic is used
Pallor
• Lower palpebral conjunctiva
• Tongue
• Oral mucosa
• Hard palate
• Nail beds
• Palm
• Sole
• Pallor / paleness, is waxy appearance of skin
and mucous membrane
• It depends on thickness of the skin and
quantity and quality of blood in capillaries
• Thus pallor and anemia are not interchangable
words
Icterus
• Examine in good sunlight
• Upper sclera
• Under aspect of tongue
• Palms
• Nails
• Skin
• It is the yellowish discolouration of skin and
mucous membrane due to excess amount of
Brn in blood 
• Normal 0.3 – 1 mg%
• Clinical jaundice when s.brn crosses 3mg%
• Why upper border of bulbar conjunctiva??
• Sclera contains lot of elastin
• Brn has strong affinity for elastic tissue
• A white background is formed by sclera
d/d for jaundice
• Carotenemia  skin will be yellow , sclera and
mucous membrane are unaffected
• Diffuse xanthamatosis
• Muddy sclera
• Atabrine toxicity
Cyanosis
• It is defined as bluish discolouration of skin
and mucous membrane due to the presence
of increased amount of reduced haemoglobin
• >5g%
• Kyanos  dark blue colour
• Osis  condition
Sites
• Tongue
• Lips
• Ear lobes
• Tip of nose
• Nail beds
• Tips of fingers
• Toes
Types
• Central cyanosis
• Peripheral cyanosis
• Differential cyanosis
• Enterogenous cyanosis
• Mixed cyanosis
Peripheral cyanosis
• Arterial PaO2 is normal
• Oxygen unsaturation at the venous end of
capillary
• Reduced cardiac output
• Peripheral vasoconstriction
• Slow speed of circulation in the peripheries
Causes
• Exposure to cold air/water
• CCF
• Frost bite
• Raynaud’s phenomenon
• Shock / Peripheral circulatory failure due to
any cause
• Venous obstruction – produces local cyanosis (
eg SVC syndrome )
• Hyperviscosity syndorome  Multiple
myeloma , Polycythemia , macroglobinemia
• Mitral stenosis  lips , tip of nose and cheeks
may be cyanosed in mitral facies
• Septicemia (especially Gram neg organism)
Sites for peripheral C
• Tip of nose
• Ear lobule
• Outer aspect of lips , chin and cheek
• Tips of fingers and toes
• Nail bed of fingers and toes
• Palms and soles
• Tongue remains unaffected in peripheral
cyanosis
• Mechanism of peripheral cyanosis  stagnant
hypoxia , over utilisation hypoxia
Central cyanosis
• Arterial PaO2 is reduced
• Due to imperfect oxygenation of blood
• Oxygen saturation will go below 80 – 85%
Sites
• Tongue  mainly margins as well as
undersurface
• Inner aspect of lips
• Mucous membrane of gum , palate and cheek
• Plus Peripheral areas
• Mechanism  hypoxic hypoxia
Causes of central cyanosis
• Cyanotic congenital heart disease
• Eisenmenger’s syndrome
• Acute severe Asthma
• Respiratory failure , Respiratory depression
• Tension pneumothorax
• Acute laryngeal edema
• Acute pulmonary thromboembolism
• High altitude ???
Enterogenous / Pigment cyanosis
• Cyanosis due to excessive meth Hb or sulph Hb in
blood
• Causes
1. Hereditary Hb M disease
2. Posioning by anilline dyes
3. Drugs like nitrates , nitrites , phenacetin ,
sulphonamides , dapsone ,
4. Carboxy haemoglobinemia
• Diagnosis can be confirmed by spectroscopic
examination of blood
d/d of bluish discolouration of body
• Cyanosis
• Carbon monoxide poisoning  cherry red
flush
• Argyria  silver poisoning
• Osteogenesis imperfecta
• Drugs like Amiodarone produces bluish hue in
the skin ( ceruloderma)
Mixed cyanosis
• CCF due to left sided heart failure
• Acute MI with Acute LVF
• Rarely polycythemia
Differential cyanosis
• Hand red and feet blue  PDA with
Eisenmenger’s syndrome
• VV Coarctaion of aorta , transposition of
great vessels
Orthocyanosis
• It is the development of cyanosis only ion the
upright position due o hypoxia occuring in
erect posture as a result of associated
pulmonary AV malformations
Clubbing
• Defined as the bulbous enlargement of the
distal segments of fingers and toes due to the
proliferation of soft tissue especially on their
dorsal surface
Grades of clubbing
• Grade 1  Fluctuation of nail bed
• Grade 2 Obliteration of nail– nail fold angle
• Grade 3 Drum stick or parrot beak
appearance
• Grade 4  Hypertrophic Pulmonary
Osteoarthropathy
Methods of eliciting
• Lovibond’s angle  the non dominent finger
is inspected from the side
• Normal angle  172+/- 8
• Clubbing angle > 180
• Digital index method Dermographic method
• Dital phalangeal distance/Interphalangeal
distance
• Most sensitive measure of clubbing
• Forefinger of the non dominant hand is used
• Outline of the finger is drawn
• Transverse distance at the level of Distal Inter
phalangeal joint (IPD) & at the base of the nail
(DPD) is measured
• DPD/IPD
• Normal ratio < 0.825
• Clubbing when ratio exceeds 1
• Ratio of all the ten fingers added together if
exceeding 10 is very suggestive
Schamroth sign
• The tip and distal phalanx of both the thumb
when approximated enclose a rhomboid
space normally
• In clubbing this space is obliterated
Ungusometer
• Instrument for measuring clubbing
HPOA
• Triad of Clubbing , Joint pain and sub
periosteal new bone formation
• Technetium Bone Scintigraphy is the best
method of assessing HPOA
• Causes  SCC, Benign Mesothelioma ,
suppurative lung disease
Theories of clubbing
• Neural  disease in lungs –vagu stimulation --
VD
• Humoral  substances produced by diseased
lungs gets deposited
• Toxic toxic substance gets deposited
• Shunt theory
Shunt theory of clubbing
• Normally Megakaryocytes are converted into
platelets in the lungs
• In lung pathology they bypass the lungs
(shunt) and gets deposited in the small AV
connections in the finger tips and produce
PDGF which causes fibroblast proliferation and
tissue fibrosis
Causes
• Cardiac  Cyanotic Heart disease , Infective
endocarditis , Eisenmenger syndrome
• Pulmonary  Bronchiectasis , Lung Abscess,
Empyema
• GIT  IBD, cirrhosis
• Hereditary clubbing  familial , usually not
present at birth , appears later
• Unidigital  local insults
Pseudo clubbing
• Hyperparathyroidism
• Leukemia
• Hansen’s disease
Painful clubbing
• Infective endocarditis
• Lung abscess
• Empyema
Differential clubbing
• PDA – Eisenmenger syndrome
• Aneurysm of descending aorta
• Infected arterial grafts
Unilateral clubbing
• Subclavian innominate artery aneurysm
• AV malformations
• Infected arterial graft
• Pancoast tumour
Lymphadenopathy
• Patient in sitting position cervical and axillary
nodes
• In supine position for abdominal and inguinal
nodes
Note
• Site
• Number
• Size
• Consistency
• Tenderness
• Mobility
• Matted / discrete
• Fixity to skin
• Condition of overlying skin
• Condition of area of drainage
Cervical nodes
• Stand behind the patient
• Keep the neck slightly flexed forward and
sideways toward the side of examination
• Palpate  submental , submandibular ,
preauricular , jugulodigastric , supraclavicular ,
deep cervical
• Scalene nodes  dipping the palpating finger
behind the clavicle through the clavicular
insertion of SCM from behind
Or
• Standing in front palpating the node behind
the clavicular head of SCM with thumb and
index finger
• Now stand in front to examine
• Posterior auricular and occipital nodes
• Epitrochlear  lift the arm , flex the elbow to
the right angle. Palpate the nodes with the flat
of the thumb of the opposite hand
Axillary nodes
• Pectoral group
• Brachial group
• Subscapular group
• Central group
• Apical group
Pectoral group
• Examined from front
• Situated just behind the Anterior axillary fold
• Patients’s arm is elevated and using the right
hand for the left side the fingers are insinuate
behind the pectoralis major
Brachial group
• Lie on the lateral wall of axilla in relation to the
axillary vein
• Left hand is used for left side
• This group is felt with the palm directed laterally
against the upper end of humerus
Subscapular group
• This lies on the posterior axillary fold
• Examined from behind
• Standing behind the patient the examiner
palpates the antero internal surface of the
posterior fold while with the other hand the
patient’s arm is semi lifted
Central group
• Group of left side is examined with right
• Patient’s arm is slightly abducted and pass the
extended fingers right upto the apex of axilla
directing the parm towards the lateral thoracic
wall
• Other hand in the shoulder to stabilise
Apical group
• Same as central but the fingers are pushed
further up
• Abdominal nodes can be looked for by deep
palpation of the abdomen
• Inguinal nodes  patient supine with thigh
flexed at 10 degree
• Palpate the horizontal and vertical group
• Popliteal nodes are palpated deep in the
popliteal fossa with knee flexed
• Widening of dullness in the upper
mediastinum on light percussion of chest may
indicate the presence of enlarged mediastinal
nodes
• As a general statement LN of more than 1 cm
is considered as relevent
Edema
• Patient supine / left lateral position
• Inspect the lower extrimities and pre sacral
areas
• Skin will be stretched and shiny and normal
wrinkles will be obliterated
• Apply gentle pressure with the flat of the
thumb 30 seconds over the bony area
• And look for pitting
Bony areas
• Shin of tibia
• Medial malleolus
• Sacrum
Head to Foot Examination
Look ….
• Head
• Eyes
• Ears
• Mouth
• Teeth
• Neck
• Chest
• Spine
• UL
• LL
• Abdomen
• Genetalia
• Skin
Head
• Microcephaly
• Macrocephaly
• Fontanels
• Shape
• Scalp Swellings
• Skin of scalp
• Hair of scalp
• Face
Microcephaly
• 2/3 SD below normal
• One SD = 2.5% of the expected
A. Primary Microcephaly
I. Asymptomatic
II. Symptomatic
B. Secondary Microcephaly
Primary Microcephaly
• Brain is small
• Because of genetic , chromosomal ,idiopathic,
familial reasons
• Brain inherently had very poor potential for
growth
• It can be asymptomatic – usually familial
/when followed up will be normal
• Primary Microcephaly with symptoms  like
seizures
• Includes genetic, chromosomal , or
dysmorphic syndromes and some cases of
microcephaly with Mendelian inheritance
• It can be AD/AR/X linked
• Features  receding forehead tapering off
towards the vertex and flat occiput– usually in
AR transmitted PSFMi.
Syndromes with P.S.mi.
• Downs syndrome
• Edward syndrome
• Rubinstein- Taybi
Rubinstein Taybi syndrome
• Rubinstein–Taybi syndrome (RTS), also known as
broad thumb- hallux syndrome or Rubinstein
syndrome, is a condition characterized by short
stature, moderate to severe learning difficulties,
distinctive facial features, and broad thumbs and first
toes. Other features of the disorder vary among
affected individuals. People with this condition have an
increased risk of developing noncancerous and
cancerous tumors, leukemia, and lymphoma. This
condition is sometimes inherited as an autosomal
dominant pattern and is uncommon, many times it
occurs as a de novo (not inherited) occurrence, it
occurs in an estimated 1 in 125,000-300,000 births.
Secondary Microcephaly
• Due to insults in brain that had normal
potential for growth
1. Intrauterine infections – CMV , Rubella ,
Toxoplasma
2. Intrauterine Toxins – Foetal Alcohol
syndrome , foetal hydantoin syndrome ,
maternal PKU
3. Perinatal and Post natal insults to brain
Meningitis ,encephalitis , Intracranial
haemorrhage , HIE,
4. Craniostenosis –it is a primary disorder 
premature fusion of cranial sutures even
though brain is growing normally
skull may be odd shaped ,with palpable riging
of suture lines
• Microcephaly in Rett’s syndrome is supposed
to be acquired , the child grows normally till
about one year after which the arrest of brain
growth occurs
• See for other evidence of squint , cataract ,
Choreoretinitis
Rett’s syndrome
• Rett syndrome, originally termed as cerebroatrophic
hyperammonemia is a rare genetic postnatal neurological disorder
of the grey matterof the brainthat almost exclusively affects
females but has also been found in male patients. The clinical
features include small hands and feet and a deceleration of the rate
of head growth (including microcephaly in some). Repetitive
stereotyped hand movements, such as wringing and/or repeatedly
putting hands into the mouth, are also noted.People with Rett
syndrome are prone to gastrointestinal disorders and up to 80%
have seizures.They typically have no verbal skills, and about 50% of
individuals affected do not walk. Scoliosis, growth failure, and
constipation are very common and can be problematic.
• The signs of this disorder are most easily confused with those of
Angelman syndrome, cerebral palsy and autism. Rett syndrome
occurs in approximately 1:10,000 live female births in all
geographies, and across all races and ethnicities.
Macrocephaly
• 2 SD above normal
• Causes
1. Familial
2. Hydrocephalus(congenital /Acquired )
3. Achondroplasia (partly due to ventricular
dilatation and partly due to megalencephaly )
4. Cerebral gigantism / Sotos syndrome
5. Fragile X syndrome
6. Mucopolysaccharidosis
Achondroplasia
• Achondroplasia is a common cause of dwarfism. It occurs as a
sporadic mutation in approximately 80% of cases (associated with
advanced paternal age) or may be inherited as an autosomal
dominant genetic disorder.
• People with achondroplasia have short stature, with an average
adult height of 131 centimeters (52 inches) for males and 123
centimeters (48 inches) for females. Achondroplastic adults are
known to be as short as 62.8 cm (24.7 in). The disorder is caused by
a change in the gene for fibroblast growth factor receptor 3
(FGFR3), which causes an abnormality of cartilage formation. If
both parents of a child have achondroplasia, and both parents pass
on the mutant gene, then it is very unlikely that the homozygous
child will live past a few months of its life. The prevalence is
approximately 1 in 25,000.[1]
Sotos sydrome
• Sotos syndrome (cerebral gigantism) is a rare genetic disorder
characterized by excessive physical growth during the first 2 to 3
years of life. The disorder may be accompanied by autism, mild
mental retardation, delayed motor, cognitive, and social
development, hypotonia (low muscle tone), and speech
impairments. Children with Sotos syndrome tend to be large at
birth and are often taller, heavier, and have relatively large skulls
(macrocephaly) than is normal for their age. Signs of the disorder,
which vary among individuals, include a disproportionately large
skull with a slightly protrusive forehead, large hands and feet, large
mandible, hypertelorism (an abnormally increased distance
between the eyes)(large inter-pupillary distance), and downslanting
eyes. Clumsiness, an awkward gait, and unusual aggressiveness or
irritability may also occur. Although most cases of Sotos syndrome
occur sporadically, familial cases have also been reported. It is
similar to Weaver syndrome.
Fragile x syndrome
• Fragile X syndrome (FXS), also known as Martin–Bell
syndrome, or Escalante's syndrome (more commonly
used in South American countries), is a genetic
syndrome that is the most widespread single-gene
cause of autism and inherited cause of intellectual
disability especially among boys. It results in a
spectrum of intellectual disabilities ranging from mild
to severe as well as physical characteristics such as an
elongated face, large or protruding ears, and large
testes (macroorchidism), and behavioral characteristics
such as stereotypic movements (e.g. hand-flapping),
and social anxiety.
7. Neurocutaneous syndromes like Tuberous
sclerosis , Neurofibromatosis
8. Certain white matter degenerative diseases –
Alexander and Canavan Disease
9. Macrocephaly due to thickening of widening
of skull - Rickets , Thalassemia
10. Pseudohydrocephalus  when compared
with dwarfed face and body  Russel silver
syndrome
Alexander ds
• Alexander disease, also known as fibrinoid leukodystrophy, is a slowly
progressing and fatal neurodegenerative disease. It is a very rare disorder
which results from a genetic mutation and mostly affects infants and
children, causing developmental delay and changes in physical
characteristics.
• Alexander disease is a genetic disorder affecting the central nervous
system (midbrain and cerebellum). It is caused by mutations in the gene
for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)that maps to chromosome 17q21. It
is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, such that the child of a
parent with the disease has a 50/50 chance of inheriting the condition, if
the parent is heterozygotic. However, most cases arise de novo as the
result of sporadic mutations.
• Delays in development of some physical, psychological and behavioral
skills, progressive enlargement of the head (macrocephaly), seizures,
spasticity in some cases also hydrocephalus, idiopathic intracranial
hypertension (IIH), dementia.
Canavan’s ds
• Canavan disease, also called Canavan-Van Bogaert-
Bertrand disease is an
autosomalrecessivedegenerative disorder that causes
progressive damage to nerve cells in the brain, and is
one of the most common degenerative cerebral
diseases of infancy. It is caused by a deficiency of the
enzyme aminoacylase 2 deficiency, and is one of a
group of genetic diseases referred to as a
leukodystrophies. It is characterized by degeneration of
myelin in the phospholipid layer insulating the axon of
a neuron and is associated with a gene located on
human chromosome 17.
Russell silver syndrome
• Russell-Silver syndrome is a growth disorder characterized by slow growth before
and after birth. Babies with this condition have a low birth weight and often fail to
grow and gain weight at the expected rate (failure to thrive). Head growth is
normal, however, so the head may appear unusually large compared to the rest of
the body. Affected children are thin and have poor appetites, and some develop
low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) as a result of feeding difficulties. Adults with
Russell-Silver syndrome are short; the average height for affected males is about
151 centimeters (4 feet, 11 inches) and the average height for affected females is
about 140 centimeters (4 feet, 7 inches).
• Many children with Russell-Silver syndrome have a small, triangular face with
distinctive facial features including a prominent forehead, a narrow chin, a small
jaw, and down-turned corners of the mouth. Other features of this disorder can
include an unusual curving of the fifth finger (clinodactyly), asymmetric or uneven
growth of some parts of the body, and digestive system abnormalities. Russell-
Silver syndrome is also associated with an increased risk of delayed development
and learning disabilities.
Other associated findings
• Full fontanel
• Seperation of sutures
• Cracked pot sound (in older children with sutures closed)
• Brisk lower limb reflexes
• Papilloedema
• Spine – spina bifida tuft of hair
• Cranial bruit  Vein of Galen Malformation
• Always measure Parents head circumference
• Dysmorphism ( Mucopolysaccharidosis)
• Ask for blood transfusion history  hemolytic anemia ,
osteoporosis
Fontanales
• There are 6 fontanales
• Only 2 palpable
• AF – 2.5 *2.5 cm
• Can be 4 cm in the AP direction
• Size of AF “increases” after birth
• Normally slightly depressed from the surface
• PF is normally <1 cm , barely admits tip of
little finger
• PF closes by 2 months
• AF closes by 9 – 18 months
• Pulsation of AF is normal
• Significant depression  dehydration
• Bulging  normal pulsation also decreases
Delayed closure of AF
• Rickets
• Congenital hypothyroidism
• Malnutrition
• Osteogenesis imperfecta
• Achondroplasia
• Down’s syndrome
• Trisomies
• On Palpation suture lines are not easily
palpable after six months of age , but in
hydrocephalus they remain palpably
seperated
Small fontanel
• Craniosynostosis(look for ridging of suture
lines )
• Variation of normal
Sunken Fontanel
• Dehydration usually when 10% weight is lost
Bulging Fontanel
1.Raised ICT  Maningitis , SDH , IC bleed ,
ICSOL ,
As the ICT raises AF pulsation decrease and
ultimately vanish
Note that absent AF pulsation can be normal
but in that case it will not be bulging
• 2. Hydrocephalus  AF may be bulging and
non pulsatile or pulsation may reduce from
what was there previously
• Scalp veins appear prominent
3. Crying child
4. Benign Intracranial Hypertension
Benign Intracranial Hypertension
• Nalidixic acid
• Tetracycline
• Vitamin A Toxicity
• Infections like Exanthem Subitum
Cephalic Index
• Head width /Head length * 100
Cephalic index Interpretation
<76
DOLICHOCEPHALY
76 – 80.9
NORMAL
>/= 81
BRACHYCEPHALY
Asymmetry of shape of head
• Dolichocephaly/ Scaphocephaly
• Brachycephaly
• Plagiocephaly
• Trigonocephaly
• Turricephaly /Oxycephaly / Acrocephaly
Dolichocephaly /Scaphocephaly
• Increased AP diameter
• Here the sagittal suture closes early
Brachycephaly
• Premature fusion of coronal suture
• Transverse diameter is more
• Occiput may be flat as in Brachycephaly of
Down’s syndrome
Plagiocephaly
• Head shape is assymmetric due to premature
fusion of sutures unilaterally
• Eg:- Premature unilateral fusion of coronal or
lamdoid suture or both
Trigonocephaly
• Triangular Transverse plane often with Ocular
hypotelorism
• Prominent mid frontal ridging due to
premature fusion of metopic suture
Turricephaly
• Skull is high , narrow and tower shaped
• Head is tower shaped with short AP diameter ,
high forehead and flat occiput
• Due to premature fusion of many sutures (
usually 4 or more )
• It is found in Apert syndrome
Apert syndrome
• Apert syndrome is a form of acrocephalosyndactyly, a
congenital disorder characterized by malformations of the
skull, face, hands and feet. It is classified as a branchial arch
syndrome, affecting the first branchial (or pharyngeal) arch,
the precursor of the maxilla and mandible. Disturbances in
the development of the branchial arches in fetal
development create lasting and widespread effects.
• In 1906, Eugène Apert, a French physician, described nine
people sharing similar attributes and
characteristics.Linguistically, "acro" is Greek for "peak",
referring to the "peaked" head that is common in the
syndrome. "Cephalo", also from Greek, is a combining form
meaning "head". "Syndactyly" refers to webbing of fingers
and toes.
Scalp swelling
• Dermoid
• Histiocytosis
• Osteoma
• Organized cephalhematoma
• Secondary deposits
• Traumatic
Seborrhoeic dermatitis of scalp
• Yellow crusted plaques in scalp
• Cradle cap
Cephalhematoma
• Sub periosteal collection of blood
• Due to elevation of periosteum
• Does not cross the suture line s
• Reaches maximum size by 3rd day
• Usually the parietal bone is most commonly
affected
• When B/L it may be associated with skull #
• Disappears by 3-6 weeks /calcified /and then
remodels
Caput succedaneum
• Diffuse , soft , boggy , swelling of the scalp
• Seen at time of birth
• Crosses suture lines
• Disappears by 1- 2 days
Cranial bossing
• It is the prominence of central part of parietal
and frontal bones
• When frontal bone alone is involved it is called
frontal bossing
Causes
• Rounded prominence in the centre of the parietal
and frontal bones may be an early manifestation
of rickets
• Hydrocephalus
• Congenital syphilis
• Thalassaemia
• Cleidocranial dysostosis
• Hurler’s syndrome
• Achondroplasia
Hurler syndrome
• Hurler syndrome, also known as
mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I), Hurler's
disease, also gargoylism, is a genetic disorder
that results in the buildup of glycosaminoglycans
(formerly known as mucopolysaccharides) due to
a deficiency of alpha-L iduronidase, an enzyme
responsible for the degradation of
mucopolysaccharides in lysosomes. Without this
enzyme, a buildup of heparan sulfate and
dermatan sulfate occurs in the body. Symptoms
appear during childhood and early death can
occur due to organ damage.
Head tilt / Torticollis
• Local painful conditions /sternomastoid
“tumour”
• Compensation of visual defect /strabismus
• Herniation of cerebellar tonsils
• Klippel Feil deformity
• Dystonic reaction to drugs
•
Klippel Feil syndrome
• Klippel – Feil syndrome is a rare disease, initially
reported in 1912 by Maurice Klippel and André
Feil from France , characterized by the congenital
fusion of any 2 of the 7 cervical vertebrae. The
syndrome occurs in a heterogeneous group of
patients unified only by the presence of a
congenital defect in the formation or
segmentation of the cervical spine. Klippel–Feil
syndrome can be identified by shortness of the
neck. Those with the syndrome have a very low
hairline and the ability of the neck to move is
limited.
Head tilt
• Both occiput and chin are
deviated to same side
Torticollis
• Occiput is tilted to one side
and chin is shifted to other
side
Scalp hair
• Colour and texture
• White hair  Albinism
• Malnutrition  sparse , straight , thin ,easily
pluckable , lack luster , grey or red shcked , or
alternatively depigmented and pigmented
called flag sign
• Flag sign  in kwashiorkor , where there is
alternating periods of abnormal and normal
nutrition
Hypopigmented hair
• SAM
• Albinism
• PKU
Hair in Microcephaly
• Frontal upsweep of hair
• “cow lick”
• May be seen
Alopecia
• Congenital ectodermal dysplasia
• Chemotherapy and radiation
• Localised area of hair loss  Alopecia aerata,
over scars, fungal infections , also
psychological (trichotillomania )
Hypertrichosis
• Cushing syndrome
• deLange syndrome
• Precocious puberty
• Drugs  minoxidil , dilantin , androgens
• Familial
Low hair line
• Extending below the spine of C4
• Turner’s sundrome
• Low hairline in front  Hypothyroidism
• Hair is coarse and sparse in hypothyroidism
• Low hairline in back  can be a feature of
short neck  Klippel Feil syndrome
• Excess projection of hair into the cheek is seen
in Treacher Collins syndrome
Treacher Collins syndrome
• Treacher Collins syndrome (TCS), also known as
Treacher Collins–Franceschetti syndrome, or
mandibulofacial dysostosis, is a rare autosomal
dominant congenital disorder characterized by
craniofacial deformities, such as absent
cheekbones. Treacher Collins syndrome is found
in about one in 50,000 births. The typical physical
features include downward-slanting eyes,
micrognathia (a small lower jaw), conductive
hearing loss, underdeveloped zygoma, drooping
part of the lateral lower eyelids, and malformed
or absent ears.
Sparse or absent hair
• Unhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia
Kinky hair
• Menkes Kinky hair syndrome
Menkes kinky hair syndrome
• Menkes disease (MNK), also called Menkes
syndrome, copper transport disease, steely hair
disease, kinky hair disease, or Menkes kinky hair
syndrome, is a disorder that affects copper levels
in the body] leading to copper deficiency. It is an
x-linked recessive disorder, and is therefore
considerably more common in males: females
require two defective alleles to develop the
disease.
• The disorder was originally described by John
Hans Menkes (1928–2008) et al. in 1962.
Craniotabes
• Thin, parchment like , soft , mushy areas of
skin that indents like ping pong ball
• Physiological upto 3 months
• Should be elicited away from the suture lines ,
as it may be normally elicitable near the
suture lines
Craniotabes
• Rickets
• Congenital syphilis
• Osteogenesis imperfecta
• Hydrocephalus
Face
• Myopathic facies
• Moon facies
• Puffy facies
• Coarse facies
• Mask like facies
• Triangular facies
Myopathic facies
• Long drawn and thin neck facies
Moon face
• Rounded face
• Normal in obese
• Cushing syndrome
Puffy face
• Oedema
• Nephrotic syndrome
• Hypothyroidism  bit puffy with dull
expression
Coarse facies
• Hypothyroidism
• Mucopolysacharidosis (Hurler’s)
• Gangliosidosis
• Sotos syndrome
• Williams syndrome
William’s syndrome
• Williams syndrome (WS), also known as Williams–Beuren
syndrome (WBS), is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder
characterized by: a distinctive, "elfin" facial appearance,
along with a low nasal bridge; an unusually cheerful
demeanor and ease with strangers; developmental delay
coupled with strong language skills; and cardiovascular
problems, such as supravalvular aortic stenosis and
transient hypercalcaemia.
• It is caused by a deletion of about 26 genes from the long
arm of chromosome 7 . The syndrome was first identified in
1961 by New Zealander J.C.P. Williams and has an
estimated prevalence of 1 in 7,500 to 1 in 20,000 births.
Mask like facies
• Face is expression less
• Wilson’s disease and other diseases affecting
EPS
• Tranquilizer overdose
• Mobius syndrome (neuroparalysis)
• Infantile botulsim (neuroparalysis)
• Depression
• Myotonic dystrophy
Mobius syndrome
• Möbius syndrome (also spelled Moebius) is an
extremely rare congenital neurological disorder which
is characterized by facial paralysis and the inability to
move the eyes from side to side. Most people with
Möbius syndrome are born with complete facial
paralysis and cannot close their eyes or form facial
expressions. Limb and chest wall abnormalities
sometimes occur with the syndrome. People with
Möbius syndrome have normal intelligence, although
their lack of facial expression is sometimes incorrectly
taken to be due to dullness or unfriendliness. It is
named for Paul Julius Möbius, a neurologist who first
described the syndrome in 1888
Triangular facies
• Variation of normal
• Russel silver syndrome
• Turner’s syndrome
Hemolytic facies
• Typically in Beta thalassemia
• Frontal bossing
• Depressed bridge of nose
• Maxillary prominence
• Prominent malar eminence
• Protruding malaligned teeth
Adenoid facies
• Protruding perioral area
• With partially open mouth
• No changes over maxilla or frontal bones
Absent DAOM
• Depressor anguli oris muscle
• Its congenital absence produces  assymetric
lowering of lower lip during crying
• Can be seen in normal children
• Has association with heart disease
Depressed nasal bridge
• Normal in certain races
• Down’s syndrome
• Congenital syphilis (called saddle nose)
• Late stage of leprosy
Short columella
• Short columella pulls down the nasal tip and
distorts the nose and gives flat appearance to
the nose
Hypoplasia of ala nasi
• Gives a pinched appearance and produces
beak nose
Broad nasal bridge
• Implies palpable widening of nasal bones
Epistaxis
• Trauma
• Rhinitis
• FB
• Polyps
• Diphtheria
• HTN
• Bleeding disorders
Micrognathia
• Pierre Robin syndrome
• Treacher collins syndrome
• Sequle of long standing juvenile RA
• Cri du chat syndrome
• Di George syndrome
• Foetal alcohol syndrome
• Rubinstein Taybi syndrome
• Russel silver syndrome
Prognathism
• Angelman syndrome
• Fragile X syndrome
• Acromegaly
Eyes
• Eye ball tension
• Palpate with index finger with eye closed
• Increased in glaucoma
• And reduced in dehydration
Lip edema
• Part of generalised edema ( Nephritis , NS ,
cardiac failure, kwashiorkor)
• Severe cough and excessive crying
• Local causes  conjunctivitis , stye
• Angioedema
• Dermatomyositis
• Hypothyroidism
• IMN (occassionally)
Microphthalmos
• Reduction in size of all ocular structures
• Congenital infections  CMV , Rubella ,
Toxoplasmosis
• Goldenhar syndrome
• CHARGE syndrome
• Microphthalmia with colobomata is usualy an
AD inheritance
Eye lid colobomas
• Eyelid defects
• Lower eyelid  Tracher collins syndrome
• Upper eyelid  Goldenhar’s syndrome
• CHARGE
• Coloboma  developmental defect of any
protion of eye ( MC iris)
Ptosis
• Transient in new born
• Congenital ptosis ( U/L or B/L )
• Oculomotor palsy
• Horner’s syndrome
• Myasthenia gravis
• Noonan syndrome
• Myotonic dystrophy
• Local eye lesions like edema of lids
Proptosis
• Malignancies  Neuroblastoma , Leukemia ,
Retinoblastoma , chloroma of AML ,
Langerhan cell histiocytosis
• Cavernous hemangioma , Optic nerve glioma
• Craniostenostosis  Apert’s syndrome ,
Crouzon’s syndrome
• Hyperthyroidism
Epicanthic fold
• It is a crescent shaped fold of skin , originating
below the eye and sweeps upwards to blend
with upper eye lid so that the inner canthus is
covered
• Tends to disappear as the bridge of nose get
elevated with the growth of child
• So flat nasal bridge gives extra skin to show up
as a fold
• Another reason  syndromes with loose skin
• Unilateral epicanthic fold  torticollis
• Classic in down syndrome
• Races  but not so prominent to cover the
inner portion of both lids
• Seen in some normal newborns , disappears
by 1-3 months , as the bridge of the nose
grows
• Down’s syndrome , Noonan’s syndrome
,Turner’s syndrome , De lange syndrome ,
Smith- Lemli- Optiz syndrome , Ehler Danlos
syndrome , Cri du chat syndrome , William’ s
syndome , Foetal alcohol syndrome , Foetal
hydantoin syndrome
Mangloid slant
• Slant is upwards
• Slanting from medial to lateral
• Racial
• Down’s syndorme
• Prader Willi syndrome
Anti mangloid slant
• Down ward slanting of eyes
• Treacher Collins syndrome
• Noonan syndrome
• Turner’s syndorme
• Apert’s syndrome
• Edward syndrome
• Down ward slant under growth of maxilla
laterally
• Upward slant  under growth of midline part
of anterior frontal brain
Hypertelorism
• Distance between the medial canthus of two
eyes is more than the width of each eyes
• Part of many syndromes
• Noonan , , Turner , Apert , Crouzen , Williams ,
Zellweger ,
• Normal variation
• Standard defenition
• Inerpupillary distance(orbital spacing ) is
measured in forward gaze and plotted
• > 3 SD is hypertelorsim
Telecanthus
• Displacement of inner canthi laterally,
eventhough the orbital spacing is normal
• There is reduction or absent visible sclera
medial to the iris along with lateral
displacement of lacrimal puncta
• Hypertelorism  may be due to hypertrophy
of lesser wing of sphenoid
• Hypertelorism ( Canthal Index) 
Distance between inner canthi divided by
distance between outer canthi >0.38
• Hypotelorism
Distance between inner canthi divide by
distance between outer canthi <0.32
Synorphrys
• Eye brows meeting each other in midline
• Normal
• Cornelia De Lange syndrome
Eyelashes
• Sparse in hypothyroidism
• Long eyelashes normal
• No association with TB
Conjunctiva
• Xerosis
• Subconjunctival haemorrhage
Heterochromia
• Assymetry of colour of iris
• Congenital horner’s syndrome
• Secondary to inflammation of the eye
• Sporadic
Chediac higashi syndrome
• Hypopigmentation of eyes ,
Skin and hair
• Recurrent bacterial infection
• Mild bleeding diathesis
Aniridia
• Absent iris , usually B/L
• Photophobia
• Impaired visual acuity
• Association with Wilm’s tumour  Children
with aniridia should be checked for
Chromosome 11 deletion
• May be familial
• May be associated with hemihypertrophy
Blue sclera
• Normal newborn or small infants
• Osteogenesis imperfecta
• Ehler Danlos syndrome
White’s eye reflex or cat’s eye reflex
• Normally when light is shown through the
pupil a red flare is seen
• Here it may be absent and pupil may appear
white
• Reflex can arise from lens , uveal tract and
retina
• MC cause is cataract
• Retinoblastoma , ROP
Other findings …
• Cataract
• Buphthalmos(congenital glaucoma)
• Optic atrophy
• Papilloedema
• RP
• KF ring
• Strabismus
• Setting sun sign
Ears
Low set ears
• An imaginary line joining medial and lateral
canthi is extended towards the ear
• Normally 1/3rd of ear comes above this line
• When less than 20% is above , it is said to be
low set ears
• A line through the lateral canthus should cut
the insertion of auricle on the side of the head
• Small low set ears are seen in Down’s
syndrome
• Large prominent  Marfan’s , Fragile X ,
• Deformed pinna  treacher Collins ,
Goldenhar’s syndome
Low set ears
• Apert’s syndrome
• Carpenter’s syndorme
• Di George syndrome
• Noonan’s syndrome
• Potter’s syndrome
• Trisomy 13
• Trisomy 18
• Turner’s syndrome
• And many dysmorphic syndromes
Protuberant ear
• The normal ear makes an angle of no more
than 10 degree with the scalp
• > 15 degrees is protuberant
• > 20 degrees is Posterior rotation of pinna
Bat ear
• Protruding ear with poorly formed folds of
helix
Pre auricular tags
• Firm as it contains a bit of cartilage
• Benign condition
• Hearing assessment may be considered
• Pre auricular pits are generally benign and run
in families
• Ask about discharge / hearing loss
• U/L large ear may be positional , like Torticollis
• Microtia  most children with microtia will
have hearing loss
• Crumpled pinna
• Tragus sign
• AOM
• Deafness
Nose
• Broad nasal root 
I. Craniofrontonasal dysplasia
II. GM1 Gangliosidosis
• Squared nasal root  Di George syndrome
Anteverted nose
• Acrodysostosis
• When the dorsum of nose is very short , nasal
tip is pulled upwards and this results in
anteverted nose
Beaked nose
• Unusually pointed prominent nose
• Or nose with poorly developed ala nasi so that
the nasal septum is seen more prominent
• Seckel syndrome
• Trisomies
• Algille syndrome
Mouth
• Normally mouth is constructed such that
outer edges of the lips fall on pependicular
dropped from the centre of either pupil when
eyes looking straight ahead
• When edges fall outside  macrostomia
• Microstomia
• Large mouth  Goldenhar syndrome
• Mandibular hypoplasia  Pierre Robin
syndrome
• Angular stomatitis  Riboflavin deficiency ,
congenital syphilis
Philtreum
• A long nose results in short philtrum and a
short nose results in long philtrum
• Long philtrum  William’s syndrome ,
Cornelia de Lange syndrome
• Short philtrum  Foetal alcohol syndrome
• Multiple frenulum  Ellis van Creveld
syndrome
Palate
• High arched  if the roof of palate is not seen
when the examiner’s eye is at the level of
upper incisor teeth and patient keeping
mouth wide open
• Prominent palatal ridging is due to poor
tongue thrusting of the baby which can be
due to neurological deficits resulting in poor
sucking
• Ridges make the palate look very narrow
• Cleft palate  isolated anomaly , trisomy18 ,
Pierre Robin syndrome, Beckwith-Wiedemann
syndrome , Foetal hydantoin syndrome
• Look for isolated cleft lip if there is nasal
twang of voice
• Submucous cleft will have to be palpated for
• Bifid uvula  Apert’s syndrome , Di George
syndrome , Treacher collin syndrome
• Painful ulcers  HZV
• Herpangioma produces painful ulcers in
oropharynx , soft palate and uvula
Drooling
• Normal during teething
• Stomatitis
• Acute Epiglottitis /Diphtheria / Tonsillitis
/Herpangioma
• Pseudobulbar palsy
Dry mouth
• Dehydration
• Mouth breathing
• Antihistamines
• Atropine like drugs
Oral thrush
• Antibiotics
• Steroids
• AIDS
• Hypoparathyroidism
Trismus
• Tetanus
• Infantile Gaucher’s disease
• Part of dystonia (metaclopramide poisoning )
• TMJ arthritis (JRA)
• Encephalitis
Cry
• Shrill cry in CNS insults like meningitis
• Cat like mewing cry  Cri du chat syndrome
• Weak cry in Neuromuscular disorders 
Werdnig Hoffman syndrome
• Crying on handling  painful condtions like
arthritis , # , meningitis
• Hoarse cry  hypothyroidism , laryngitis
Teeth
• Delayed dentition
• No teeth upto 13 month of age is considered
as delayed dentition
• Constitutional delay
• Hypothyroidism
• Hypopituitarism
• Rickets
• PEM
Discoloured teeth
• Poor oral hygiene
• Tetracycline therapy (Brownish)
• Enamel hypoplasia (Brownish)
• Kernicterus ( Brownish)
• Porphyria ( reddish)
• Iron Therapy ( blackish)
• Endemic Fluorosis ( Chalk white pathces , or
dull unglazed tooth , pitting etc)
Gum Hyperplasia
• Poor oral hygiene
• Dilantin therapy
• Acute Monocytic Leukemia
• Scurvy
• Epulis
• Delayed dentition
• Nursing caries
• Blue line across ridges of gum  lead
poisoning
• Swollen , spongy , bleeding gums  scurvy
• Neonatal teeth  normal varient , Ellis van
Creveld syndrome
Tongue
• Macroglossia
a. Congenital hypothyroidism
b. Down’s syndrome
c. Beckwith Wiedmann syndrome
d. Local causes  Cystic hygroma, hemangioma
e. Hurler’s syndrome ,GSD type 2
f. Tongue protrusion without macroglossia occur
in MR
g. Foote’s sign  rhythmic protrusion of tongue in
newborn period suggest ICH , cerebral edema
Coating of tongue
• Poor oral hygiene
• Typhoid fever
• Uremia
Ulcer of the frenulum
• In severe cough , like whooping cough ( due to
mechanical injury )
• Smooth bald tongue without papillae may be
seen in Vitamin B12 deficiency
• Geographical tongue shows reddis areas of
desquamation
Neck
• Short neck
Ratio between neck length : Height
Normal  1:13
>13 short neck
Neck length  distance between external
occipital protuberane and C7 spine
Short neck
• Turner’s syndrome
• Noonan’s syndrome
• Morquio syndrome
• Down’s syndrome
• Klippel-Feil deformity
• Sprangel’s deformity
• Platybasia
• Hypothyroidism
• Hurler’s syndrome
Goitre
• Puberty
• Iodine deficiency
• Hashimotos
• TPO Deficiency
• Grave’s disease
Webbing of neck
• Turner’s syndorme
• Noonan’s syndrome
Opisthotonus
• Kernicterus
• Tetanus
• Meningitis
• Infantile Gaucher’s disease
• Part of dystonia ( metoclopramide poisoning )
• Part of decerebration
• Local causes  Retropharyngeal abscess
Typical postures
• Epiglottitis  sitting up , leaning forward,
preferred not to lie down
• Peritonitis  lies quietly , does not move
much
• Meningitis  Lies on one side with thighs
flexed abdomen , or opisthotonus posture
• Lordotic posture  Muscular dystrophies , B/L
Hip problem
Chest
• Clavicle  absent – cleidocraial dysostosis
• Pre sternal edema may be found in mumps
• Widely spread nipples may be seen in Turner’s
syndrome  space between nipples is >25%
of the chest circumference
• Sheild shaped chest in Turner’s syndrome
• Narrow thoracic cage  Ellis van Crevald
syndrome , Jeune syndrome
• Absecne of Pectoralis muscle  Poland
syndrome
• Sprengel’s deformity  High position of
scapula with lower angle turned towards the
spine
• Gynaecomastia
Spine
• Scoliosis
• Gibbus
Upper limbs
• Clinodactyly  absence of P2 of little finger
 Down’s syndrome
• Brachydactyly  Down’s syndrome ,
Achondroplasia , Prader Willi syndrome
• Camptodactyly  Fixed flexion deformity of
5th finger  Normal , heritable , Down’s
syndrome
• Hypoplasia of the 4Th metacarpal is seen in
Pseuodohypoparathyroidism
• Here the ring finger will be shorter than the
index finger
• Reverse is true in normal children
• Broad thumb  Rubinstein –Taybi syndrome
• Bifid thumb  Holt oram , Fanconi
• Arachnodactyly  unduly long fingers 
Marfan syndrome , Homocystinuria ,
Hypogonadism , normal
• Thumb sign  Marfan’s , absent in
homocystinuria
• Wrist sign  thumb and the fifth finger will
overlap at wrist
• Trident sign  in achondroplasia  thumb
and fisrt two fingers …seperated from 4th and
5th fingers
• Overriding finger’s  trisomy 18
Polydactyly
• Post axial  associated with little finger
• Pre axial  associated with thumb
• Polydactyly of four limbs  Ellis Van crevald
syndrome
• Laurence Moon Biedl syndrome
Syndactyly
• Can be complete or partial
• Apert’s syndrome
• Trisomy 13
• Smith Lemli Optiz syndrome
• MC between 2nd and 3rd digits
Others
• Absent digits
• Lobster hand
• Absent thumb
• Triphalangeal thumb
• Osler’s nodes transient , small , pea sized ,
tender , nodules in pulp of fingers , toes ,
thenar/hypothenar eminences (IE)
• Janeway lesions painless erythematous
patches over palms and soles
• Absent clavicle
• Phocomelia
Nail
• Koilonychia
• Half and half nail  CRF
• White nail  anemia , hypoalbumenia
• Red nail  Polycythemia
• Blue lunule of nail  wilson’s disease
• Capillary pulsations Severe AR
• Nail fold telangectesia  Dermatomyositis ,
SS,SLE
• Nail – Patella syndrome 
• Hypoplastic nails 
• Hyper convex nail Turenr’s , Noonan syndrome
• Black nails  Addisons
• Splinter haemorrhages  Infective E
• Koilonychia soft , thin , brittile ,flattened , or
concave (spoon shaped) , nail seen in iron
defieciency
• May not be seen uniformily in all nails
• Can be inherited also
Dermatiglyphics
• Down’s syndrome  single palmar crease
• Kennedy crease  a deep sole crease
between first and second toe
Lower limbs
• Valgus  directed away from midline
• Cubitus valgus/varus
• Coxa varus/valgus
• Genu valgus/ varus
• Both Genu varus and valgus is physiological in
children upto 1.5 to 2 years
• Genu recurvatum  hyperextension of the
knee joint
• Pesplanus /flat foot  physiological in 1.5 to 2
years
• Pes cavus/claw foot
• Talipus equino varus  foot is adducted
downwards and inwards with medial
concavity
• Hallux valgus/varus
thanku

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General examination

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 10. Pathological tachycardia • Shock • High out put states  Fever , anemia , hyperthyroidism , beriberi • Tachy arrythmias  SVT • Drugs  Thyroxine , nifedipine , atropine , catacholamines like adrenaline
  • 11. Pulse deficit • PR and HR are counted simultaneously for 1 minute • In AF and ectopics
  • 12. Rhythm • It is the regularity with which one beat follows other • Assessed by palpating radial artery • MC cause in child is sinus arrythmia  acceleration during inspiration and deceleration during expiration
  • 13. Sinus arrhythmia • Increase in PR with inspiration and decrease in PR during expiration • Common in childresn ,athletes • Sinus arrhythmia may be absent inCCF and autonomic nueropathy
  • 14. • Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is a naturally occurring variation in heart rate that occurs during a breathing cycle. RSA is also a measure of parasympathetic nervous system activity
  • 15. Mechanism of Sinus arrhythmia • Primarily due to fluctuations in parasympathetic output to heart • Inspiration  stretch receptors in lungs  vagus  inhibits the Cardio inhibitory area in the medulla • The tonic vagal discharge that keeps the heart rate slow decreases and HR increases
  • 16. Regularly irregular • Ventricular bigemini/pulsus bigemini bi -2, gemini – twins , digitalis toxicity • Ectopic beat occuring so frequently that there is one ectopy after each sinus beat • Alternating strong(sinus) and weak (ectopic) pulse with compensatory pause • Other causes  ectopics/extrasystoles , 2nd degree heart block /any atrial arrhythmia with fixed block
  • 17. Irregularly irregular • AF • Any atrial arrhythmia with varying AV nodal conduction
  • 18. Volume of pulse Pulsus alternans Pulsus paradoxus Pulsus parvus Pulsus bigemini *
  • 19. Volume of pulse • It is the amplitude of movement of arterial wall against the palpating fingers • It is the degree of movement of arterial wall against the palpating fingers • It depends on stroke volume of the LV and distensibility of the vessel wall • It depends on Pulse pressure
  • 20. High volume pulse • Bounding pulse • Anxiety • After exercise • Fever • Anaemia • Hyperthyroidism • AV fistula • Higher SBP +/_ lower DBP
  • 21. • PDA • AR • Early septic shock  warm shock  due to peripheral Vasodilatation ( here there is fall in Diastolic BP and hence wider PP ) • Status asthmaticus  as CO2 retenstion  VD  wide PP bounding
  • 22. Low volume (Pulsus Parvus ) • Parvus = small • When PP is narrow • CCF • Shock • Severe AS • Coarctation of aorta • Severe MS
  • 23. Difference in Pulse volume • Coarctation of aorta  if distal to subclavian artery  volume will be different between upper and lower limbs • If proximal to Left subclavian artery  diminished Left upper limb pulse
  • 24. Pulsus alternans • Alternate volume of pulse beats • Method  By light palpation of the femoral artery , with breath held in mid expiration(to avoid respiratory variation ) • It is exaggerated by standing up (by reducing the venous return )
  • 25. • Can be detected by taking BP • Korotkoff’s sound doubles as the pressure falls • It is a rare but valuable sign of advanced LVF • It is due to varying force of LV contraction
  • 26. Pulsus Paradoxus • Normally SBP falls during inpiration around 3 – 10 mm Hg • PP is present when SBP falls by more than 10 mm Hg quiet inspiration • Using BP apparatus • Korotkoff’s sounds during inspiration and expiration • When difference become >20 it will be palpable
  • 27. Causes • Acute severe asthma • Cardiac tamponade • Chronic constrictive pericarditis • Hypovolemic shock • Pulmonary embolism • RV Infarction • SVC obstruction • COPD
  • 28. Reversed Pulsus paradoxus • Increased BP during inspiration • HOCM
  • 29. Water hammer pulse • Collapsing / Corrigan’s pulse • AR • PDA
  • 30. • Patient’s forearm is gripped using examiner’s left palm with sufficient pressure so that the pulse is just palpable • Arm is lifted using examiner’s right hand • When a thud will be felt if the pulse is water hammer
  • 31. it is toy of sealed glass tube containing water and vacuum On inversion water drops through vacuum to give a thud
  • 32. Character of pulse Pulsus tardus /anacrotic pulse Pulsus bisferiens Dicrotic pulse Jerky pulse Catacrotic pulse
  • 33. • It describes the pulse wave form • Best assessed over carotids • Because it is closest to the heart • Wave form is not dampened by multiple branching • Pulse wave if faster(5m/s) than actual movement of blood along the arterial tree(50 cm / sec)
  • 34. Normal character • Will have 2 positive waves in systole 1. Percussion wave due to rapid upstroke 2. Tidal wave –due to reflected waves from aortic bifurcation 3. The end of systole is indicated by a sharp notch  dicrotic notch 4. Which is followed by a positive wave  Dicrotic wave • Dicrotic notch correponds to closure of Aortic valve
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37. Pulsus tardus • Tardus  slow • Slow rising pulse • AS because LV takes a much longer time to push the blood through the stenosed valve
  • 38.
  • 39. Pulsus bisferiens • Double peak pulse • HOCM/ severe AR / AS + AR • Two peaks both in systole
  • 40.
  • 41. Dicrotic pulse • Here also 2 peaks • One in systole and other in diastole • Sepsis • Cardiomyopathy • Myocarditis
  • 42. Jerky pulse • Initial high volume from the left V • Severe MR • HOCM  sudden cut off of forward flow by hypertrophied septum
  • 43. Radio femoral delay • Normal lag is 5 ms • More in coarctation of aorta  femoral pulse is felt a little later than brachial (0.08 sec)
  • 44. Vessel wall thickness • Using three finger method
  • 45. Blood Pressure • It is the lateral thrust exerted by the blood column into the vessel which contains it • Five phases
  • 46. • Phase 1  low intensity tapping sounds • Phase 2  murmur like sound • Phase 3  higher intensity tapping sound • Phase 4  Muffling sound • Phase 5 total disappearance of sound
  • 47. • When sounds not audible  open and close the fist • LL BP  prone position • SBP >10 • DBP same • Postural hypotension • Flush method ???
  • 48. BP cuff size • The length of the inflatable bladder should encircle the arm without over lapping • The width of the bladder should cover atleast 2/3rd of the length of arm • Small cuff “super” BP
  • 49. Recommended bladder size • Newborns  3 cm • Infants  5 cm • Child  7 cm • Adult  12.5 cm • The inflatable bag of the cuff is to be 20% wider than the diameter of the limb on which it is used
  • 50. Normal BP • Newborn  90 • Infants  100 • Preschool  110 • School age  110+2mm for each year above 6 years (till 120) • Hypertension  >95th centile • High BP  between 90 – 95th centile • Normal  90th centile
  • 51. Hypotension • Less than the 5th percentile of normal age • <60 mm Hg in term neonates • <70 mm Hg in infants • <70 + 2x mm of Hg (up to 10 years ) • <90 mm Hg in children more than 10 years
  • 52. Respiration • Inspiration is an active process by the diaphragm and intercostals • Expiration is a passive process by the elastic recoiling of lungs • Accessory muscles of inspiration  scaleni ,Pectoralis , trapezius • Accessory muscles of expiration  Abdominal muscles and latissimus
  • 53. Assess • Rate • Rhythm • Type of respiration
  • 54. Rate
  • 55. Tachypnoea • Pneumonia • Pulmonary edema • ARDS • PTE
  • 56. Bradypnoea • Raised ICT • Narcotic poisoning • Hypothyroidism
  • 57. Hyperpnoea • Increase in depth of breathing proportionate to metabolic demands • Metabolic acidosis • Renal failure
  • 58. Hyperventilation • Increase in depth of breathing disproportionate to metabolic demands • Brainstem lesions • Hysteria
  • 59. Rhythm • Cheyne Stoke’s Breathing • Biots Breathing • Apneustic breathing • Ataxic breathing • Cogwheel breathing
  • 60. Cheyne stokes breathing • Periodic breathing in which periods of apnoea alternate regularly with periods of hyperpnoea • Severe LVF • Raised ICT • Narcotic drug poisoning • Renal failure
  • 61. Biots breathing • Apnoea between several shallow or few deep respirations • Seen in meningitis
  • 62. Apneustic breathing • Pause in full inspiration followed by another pause in expiration lasting for 2-3 seconds • Seen in pontine lesions
  • 63. Ataxic breathing • Deep and shallow breaths occur randomly • Medullary lesions
  • 64. Cogwheel breathing • Interrupted breathing pattern seen in anxious individuals
  • 65. Type • Physiological 1. Thoracoabdominal  females 2. Abdominothoracic  males • Pathological 1. Thoracic  Diaphragmatic paralysis , peritonitis 2. Abdominal  Pleurisy , COPD
  • 66. Temperature • Normal  36.8 +/- 0.4 degree C • 98.2 +/- 0.7 degree F • Rectal > Oral > Axillary by 0.5 degree C • Normal Diurnal variation is 1 degree F
  • 67. • If placed under tongue  1 min • If placed under axilla  3 min • Axilla need to be dry • Rectal temperature is needed only in rare cases  sever PEM  rectal thermometer with a rounded bulb
  • 68. Patterns • Continuous • Remittent • Intermittent • Relapsing fever
  • 69. Continous fever • Daily fluctuation do not exceed 1 degree C
  • 70. Remittent • Exceed above normal but never touches normal • Step ladder  typhoid
  • 71. Intermittent • Quotidian  if it occurs daily ( JRA) • Tertian  alternate days  P.falciparum/ovale/vivax • Quartan fever  every 3rd day  plasmodium malaria • Elevated temperature touches the base line
  • 72. Relapsing fever • Febrile episodes are seperated by afebrile episodes of more than one day • Eg quartan • Pel ebstein fever  HL • Fall by crisis  pneumococcal pneumonia • Fall gradually  lysis typhoid
  • 73. • With each degree rise in F , PR rises by 10 and RR by 4 • Fever with relative bradycardia  Typhoid fever , also meningitis (raised ICT ) • Viral fever (myocardial involvement )
  • 74. Hyperpyrexia • Temperature above 41 degree C 1. Heat stroke 2. Pontine haemorrhage 3. Malaria 4. Septicemia / Meningitis 5. Malingnant hyperthermia  that may occur in myopathy patients when halothane anaesthetic is used
  • 75. Pallor • Lower palpebral conjunctiva • Tongue • Oral mucosa • Hard palate • Nail beds • Palm • Sole
  • 76. • Pallor / paleness, is waxy appearance of skin and mucous membrane • It depends on thickness of the skin and quantity and quality of blood in capillaries • Thus pallor and anemia are not interchangable words
  • 77. Icterus • Examine in good sunlight • Upper sclera • Under aspect of tongue • Palms • Nails • Skin
  • 78. • It is the yellowish discolouration of skin and mucous membrane due to excess amount of Brn in blood • Normal 0.3 – 1 mg% • Clinical jaundice when s.brn crosses 3mg%
  • 79. • Why upper border of bulbar conjunctiva?? • Sclera contains lot of elastin • Brn has strong affinity for elastic tissue • A white background is formed by sclera
  • 80. d/d for jaundice • Carotenemia  skin will be yellow , sclera and mucous membrane are unaffected • Diffuse xanthamatosis • Muddy sclera • Atabrine toxicity
  • 81. Cyanosis • It is defined as bluish discolouration of skin and mucous membrane due to the presence of increased amount of reduced haemoglobin • >5g% • Kyanos  dark blue colour • Osis  condition
  • 82. Sites • Tongue • Lips • Ear lobes • Tip of nose • Nail beds • Tips of fingers • Toes
  • 83. Types • Central cyanosis • Peripheral cyanosis • Differential cyanosis • Enterogenous cyanosis • Mixed cyanosis
  • 84. Peripheral cyanosis • Arterial PaO2 is normal • Oxygen unsaturation at the venous end of capillary • Reduced cardiac output • Peripheral vasoconstriction • Slow speed of circulation in the peripheries
  • 85. Causes • Exposure to cold air/water • CCF • Frost bite • Raynaud’s phenomenon • Shock / Peripheral circulatory failure due to any cause • Venous obstruction – produces local cyanosis ( eg SVC syndrome )
  • 86. • Hyperviscosity syndorome  Multiple myeloma , Polycythemia , macroglobinemia • Mitral stenosis  lips , tip of nose and cheeks may be cyanosed in mitral facies • Septicemia (especially Gram neg organism)
  • 87. Sites for peripheral C • Tip of nose • Ear lobule • Outer aspect of lips , chin and cheek • Tips of fingers and toes • Nail bed of fingers and toes • Palms and soles
  • 88. • Tongue remains unaffected in peripheral cyanosis • Mechanism of peripheral cyanosis  stagnant hypoxia , over utilisation hypoxia
  • 89. Central cyanosis • Arterial PaO2 is reduced • Due to imperfect oxygenation of blood • Oxygen saturation will go below 80 – 85%
  • 90. Sites • Tongue  mainly margins as well as undersurface • Inner aspect of lips • Mucous membrane of gum , palate and cheek • Plus Peripheral areas • Mechanism  hypoxic hypoxia
  • 91. Causes of central cyanosis • Cyanotic congenital heart disease • Eisenmenger’s syndrome • Acute severe Asthma • Respiratory failure , Respiratory depression • Tension pneumothorax • Acute laryngeal edema • Acute pulmonary thromboembolism
  • 93. Enterogenous / Pigment cyanosis • Cyanosis due to excessive meth Hb or sulph Hb in blood • Causes 1. Hereditary Hb M disease 2. Posioning by anilline dyes 3. Drugs like nitrates , nitrites , phenacetin , sulphonamides , dapsone , 4. Carboxy haemoglobinemia • Diagnosis can be confirmed by spectroscopic examination of blood
  • 94. d/d of bluish discolouration of body • Cyanosis • Carbon monoxide poisoning  cherry red flush • Argyria  silver poisoning • Osteogenesis imperfecta • Drugs like Amiodarone produces bluish hue in the skin ( ceruloderma)
  • 95. Mixed cyanosis • CCF due to left sided heart failure • Acute MI with Acute LVF • Rarely polycythemia
  • 96. Differential cyanosis • Hand red and feet blue  PDA with Eisenmenger’s syndrome • VV Coarctaion of aorta , transposition of great vessels
  • 97. Orthocyanosis • It is the development of cyanosis only ion the upright position due o hypoxia occuring in erect posture as a result of associated pulmonary AV malformations
  • 98. Clubbing • Defined as the bulbous enlargement of the distal segments of fingers and toes due to the proliferation of soft tissue especially on their dorsal surface
  • 99. Grades of clubbing • Grade 1  Fluctuation of nail bed • Grade 2 Obliteration of nail– nail fold angle • Grade 3 Drum stick or parrot beak appearance • Grade 4  Hypertrophic Pulmonary Osteoarthropathy
  • 100. Methods of eliciting • Lovibond’s angle  the non dominent finger is inspected from the side • Normal angle  172+/- 8 • Clubbing angle > 180
  • 101. • Digital index method Dermographic method • Dital phalangeal distance/Interphalangeal distance • Most sensitive measure of clubbing • Forefinger of the non dominant hand is used • Outline of the finger is drawn • Transverse distance at the level of Distal Inter phalangeal joint (IPD) & at the base of the nail (DPD) is measured
  • 102. • DPD/IPD • Normal ratio < 0.825 • Clubbing when ratio exceeds 1 • Ratio of all the ten fingers added together if exceeding 10 is very suggestive
  • 103. Schamroth sign • The tip and distal phalanx of both the thumb when approximated enclose a rhomboid space normally • In clubbing this space is obliterated
  • 104. Ungusometer • Instrument for measuring clubbing
  • 105. HPOA • Triad of Clubbing , Joint pain and sub periosteal new bone formation • Technetium Bone Scintigraphy is the best method of assessing HPOA • Causes  SCC, Benign Mesothelioma , suppurative lung disease
  • 106. Theories of clubbing • Neural  disease in lungs –vagu stimulation -- VD • Humoral  substances produced by diseased lungs gets deposited • Toxic toxic substance gets deposited • Shunt theory
  • 107. Shunt theory of clubbing • Normally Megakaryocytes are converted into platelets in the lungs • In lung pathology they bypass the lungs (shunt) and gets deposited in the small AV connections in the finger tips and produce PDGF which causes fibroblast proliferation and tissue fibrosis
  • 108. Causes • Cardiac  Cyanotic Heart disease , Infective endocarditis , Eisenmenger syndrome • Pulmonary  Bronchiectasis , Lung Abscess, Empyema • GIT  IBD, cirrhosis • Hereditary clubbing  familial , usually not present at birth , appears later • Unidigital  local insults
  • 109. Pseudo clubbing • Hyperparathyroidism • Leukemia • Hansen’s disease
  • 110. Painful clubbing • Infective endocarditis • Lung abscess • Empyema
  • 111. Differential clubbing • PDA – Eisenmenger syndrome • Aneurysm of descending aorta • Infected arterial grafts
  • 112. Unilateral clubbing • Subclavian innominate artery aneurysm • AV malformations • Infected arterial graft • Pancoast tumour
  • 113. Lymphadenopathy • Patient in sitting position cervical and axillary nodes • In supine position for abdominal and inguinal nodes
  • 114. Note • Site • Number • Size • Consistency • Tenderness • Mobility • Matted / discrete • Fixity to skin • Condition of overlying skin • Condition of area of drainage
  • 115. Cervical nodes • Stand behind the patient • Keep the neck slightly flexed forward and sideways toward the side of examination • Palpate  submental , submandibular , preauricular , jugulodigastric , supraclavicular , deep cervical
  • 116. • Scalene nodes  dipping the palpating finger behind the clavicle through the clavicular insertion of SCM from behind Or • Standing in front palpating the node behind the clavicular head of SCM with thumb and index finger
  • 117. • Now stand in front to examine • Posterior auricular and occipital nodes • Epitrochlear  lift the arm , flex the elbow to the right angle. Palpate the nodes with the flat of the thumb of the opposite hand
  • 118. Axillary nodes • Pectoral group • Brachial group • Subscapular group • Central group • Apical group
  • 119. Pectoral group • Examined from front • Situated just behind the Anterior axillary fold • Patients’s arm is elevated and using the right hand for the left side the fingers are insinuate behind the pectoralis major
  • 120. Brachial group • Lie on the lateral wall of axilla in relation to the axillary vein • Left hand is used for left side • This group is felt with the palm directed laterally against the upper end of humerus
  • 121. Subscapular group • This lies on the posterior axillary fold • Examined from behind • Standing behind the patient the examiner palpates the antero internal surface of the posterior fold while with the other hand the patient’s arm is semi lifted
  • 122. Central group • Group of left side is examined with right • Patient’s arm is slightly abducted and pass the extended fingers right upto the apex of axilla directing the parm towards the lateral thoracic wall • Other hand in the shoulder to stabilise
  • 123. Apical group • Same as central but the fingers are pushed further up
  • 124. • Abdominal nodes can be looked for by deep palpation of the abdomen • Inguinal nodes  patient supine with thigh flexed at 10 degree • Palpate the horizontal and vertical group • Popliteal nodes are palpated deep in the popliteal fossa with knee flexed
  • 125. • Widening of dullness in the upper mediastinum on light percussion of chest may indicate the presence of enlarged mediastinal nodes • As a general statement LN of more than 1 cm is considered as relevent
  • 126. Edema • Patient supine / left lateral position • Inspect the lower extrimities and pre sacral areas • Skin will be stretched and shiny and normal wrinkles will be obliterated • Apply gentle pressure with the flat of the thumb 30 seconds over the bony area • And look for pitting
  • 127. Bony areas • Shin of tibia • Medial malleolus • Sacrum
  • 128. Head to Foot Examination
  • 129. Look …. • Head • Eyes • Ears • Mouth • Teeth • Neck • Chest • Spine • UL • LL • Abdomen • Genetalia • Skin
  • 130. Head • Microcephaly • Macrocephaly • Fontanels • Shape • Scalp Swellings • Skin of scalp • Hair of scalp • Face
  • 131. Microcephaly • 2/3 SD below normal • One SD = 2.5% of the expected A. Primary Microcephaly I. Asymptomatic II. Symptomatic B. Secondary Microcephaly
  • 132. Primary Microcephaly • Brain is small • Because of genetic , chromosomal ,idiopathic, familial reasons • Brain inherently had very poor potential for growth • It can be asymptomatic – usually familial /when followed up will be normal
  • 133. • Primary Microcephaly with symptoms  like seizures • Includes genetic, chromosomal , or dysmorphic syndromes and some cases of microcephaly with Mendelian inheritance • It can be AD/AR/X linked • Features  receding forehead tapering off towards the vertex and flat occiput– usually in AR transmitted PSFMi.
  • 134. Syndromes with P.S.mi. • Downs syndrome • Edward syndrome • Rubinstein- Taybi
  • 135. Rubinstein Taybi syndrome • Rubinstein–Taybi syndrome (RTS), also known as broad thumb- hallux syndrome or Rubinstein syndrome, is a condition characterized by short stature, moderate to severe learning difficulties, distinctive facial features, and broad thumbs and first toes. Other features of the disorder vary among affected individuals. People with this condition have an increased risk of developing noncancerous and cancerous tumors, leukemia, and lymphoma. This condition is sometimes inherited as an autosomal dominant pattern and is uncommon, many times it occurs as a de novo (not inherited) occurrence, it occurs in an estimated 1 in 125,000-300,000 births.
  • 136. Secondary Microcephaly • Due to insults in brain that had normal potential for growth 1. Intrauterine infections – CMV , Rubella , Toxoplasma 2. Intrauterine Toxins – Foetal Alcohol syndrome , foetal hydantoin syndrome , maternal PKU
  • 137. 3. Perinatal and Post natal insults to brain Meningitis ,encephalitis , Intracranial haemorrhage , HIE, 4. Craniostenosis –it is a primary disorder  premature fusion of cranial sutures even though brain is growing normally skull may be odd shaped ,with palpable riging of suture lines
  • 138. • Microcephaly in Rett’s syndrome is supposed to be acquired , the child grows normally till about one year after which the arrest of brain growth occurs • See for other evidence of squint , cataract , Choreoretinitis
  • 139. Rett’s syndrome • Rett syndrome, originally termed as cerebroatrophic hyperammonemia is a rare genetic postnatal neurological disorder of the grey matterof the brainthat almost exclusively affects females but has also been found in male patients. The clinical features include small hands and feet and a deceleration of the rate of head growth (including microcephaly in some). Repetitive stereotyped hand movements, such as wringing and/or repeatedly putting hands into the mouth, are also noted.People with Rett syndrome are prone to gastrointestinal disorders and up to 80% have seizures.They typically have no verbal skills, and about 50% of individuals affected do not walk. Scoliosis, growth failure, and constipation are very common and can be problematic. • The signs of this disorder are most easily confused with those of Angelman syndrome, cerebral palsy and autism. Rett syndrome occurs in approximately 1:10,000 live female births in all geographies, and across all races and ethnicities.
  • 140. Macrocephaly • 2 SD above normal • Causes 1. Familial 2. Hydrocephalus(congenital /Acquired ) 3. Achondroplasia (partly due to ventricular dilatation and partly due to megalencephaly ) 4. Cerebral gigantism / Sotos syndrome 5. Fragile X syndrome 6. Mucopolysaccharidosis
  • 141. Achondroplasia • Achondroplasia is a common cause of dwarfism. It occurs as a sporadic mutation in approximately 80% of cases (associated with advanced paternal age) or may be inherited as an autosomal dominant genetic disorder. • People with achondroplasia have short stature, with an average adult height of 131 centimeters (52 inches) for males and 123 centimeters (48 inches) for females. Achondroplastic adults are known to be as short as 62.8 cm (24.7 in). The disorder is caused by a change in the gene for fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3), which causes an abnormality of cartilage formation. If both parents of a child have achondroplasia, and both parents pass on the mutant gene, then it is very unlikely that the homozygous child will live past a few months of its life. The prevalence is approximately 1 in 25,000.[1]
  • 142. Sotos sydrome • Sotos syndrome (cerebral gigantism) is a rare genetic disorder characterized by excessive physical growth during the first 2 to 3 years of life. The disorder may be accompanied by autism, mild mental retardation, delayed motor, cognitive, and social development, hypotonia (low muscle tone), and speech impairments. Children with Sotos syndrome tend to be large at birth and are often taller, heavier, and have relatively large skulls (macrocephaly) than is normal for their age. Signs of the disorder, which vary among individuals, include a disproportionately large skull with a slightly protrusive forehead, large hands and feet, large mandible, hypertelorism (an abnormally increased distance between the eyes)(large inter-pupillary distance), and downslanting eyes. Clumsiness, an awkward gait, and unusual aggressiveness or irritability may also occur. Although most cases of Sotos syndrome occur sporadically, familial cases have also been reported. It is similar to Weaver syndrome.
  • 143. Fragile x syndrome • Fragile X syndrome (FXS), also known as Martin–Bell syndrome, or Escalante's syndrome (more commonly used in South American countries), is a genetic syndrome that is the most widespread single-gene cause of autism and inherited cause of intellectual disability especially among boys. It results in a spectrum of intellectual disabilities ranging from mild to severe as well as physical characteristics such as an elongated face, large or protruding ears, and large testes (macroorchidism), and behavioral characteristics such as stereotypic movements (e.g. hand-flapping), and social anxiety.
  • 144. 7. Neurocutaneous syndromes like Tuberous sclerosis , Neurofibromatosis 8. Certain white matter degenerative diseases – Alexander and Canavan Disease 9. Macrocephaly due to thickening of widening of skull - Rickets , Thalassemia 10. Pseudohydrocephalus  when compared with dwarfed face and body  Russel silver syndrome
  • 145. Alexander ds • Alexander disease, also known as fibrinoid leukodystrophy, is a slowly progressing and fatal neurodegenerative disease. It is a very rare disorder which results from a genetic mutation and mostly affects infants and children, causing developmental delay and changes in physical characteristics. • Alexander disease is a genetic disorder affecting the central nervous system (midbrain and cerebellum). It is caused by mutations in the gene for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)that maps to chromosome 17q21. It is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, such that the child of a parent with the disease has a 50/50 chance of inheriting the condition, if the parent is heterozygotic. However, most cases arise de novo as the result of sporadic mutations. • Delays in development of some physical, psychological and behavioral skills, progressive enlargement of the head (macrocephaly), seizures, spasticity in some cases also hydrocephalus, idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH), dementia.
  • 146. Canavan’s ds • Canavan disease, also called Canavan-Van Bogaert- Bertrand disease is an autosomalrecessivedegenerative disorder that causes progressive damage to nerve cells in the brain, and is one of the most common degenerative cerebral diseases of infancy. It is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme aminoacylase 2 deficiency, and is one of a group of genetic diseases referred to as a leukodystrophies. It is characterized by degeneration of myelin in the phospholipid layer insulating the axon of a neuron and is associated with a gene located on human chromosome 17.
  • 147. Russell silver syndrome • Russell-Silver syndrome is a growth disorder characterized by slow growth before and after birth. Babies with this condition have a low birth weight and often fail to grow and gain weight at the expected rate (failure to thrive). Head growth is normal, however, so the head may appear unusually large compared to the rest of the body. Affected children are thin and have poor appetites, and some develop low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) as a result of feeding difficulties. Adults with Russell-Silver syndrome are short; the average height for affected males is about 151 centimeters (4 feet, 11 inches) and the average height for affected females is about 140 centimeters (4 feet, 7 inches). • Many children with Russell-Silver syndrome have a small, triangular face with distinctive facial features including a prominent forehead, a narrow chin, a small jaw, and down-turned corners of the mouth. Other features of this disorder can include an unusual curving of the fifth finger (clinodactyly), asymmetric or uneven growth of some parts of the body, and digestive system abnormalities. Russell- Silver syndrome is also associated with an increased risk of delayed development and learning disabilities.
  • 148. Other associated findings • Full fontanel • Seperation of sutures • Cracked pot sound (in older children with sutures closed) • Brisk lower limb reflexes • Papilloedema • Spine – spina bifida tuft of hair • Cranial bruit  Vein of Galen Malformation • Always measure Parents head circumference • Dysmorphism ( Mucopolysaccharidosis) • Ask for blood transfusion history  hemolytic anemia , osteoporosis
  • 149. Fontanales • There are 6 fontanales • Only 2 palpable • AF – 2.5 *2.5 cm • Can be 4 cm in the AP direction • Size of AF “increases” after birth • Normally slightly depressed from the surface
  • 150. • PF is normally <1 cm , barely admits tip of little finger • PF closes by 2 months • AF closes by 9 – 18 months • Pulsation of AF is normal • Significant depression  dehydration • Bulging  normal pulsation also decreases
  • 151. Delayed closure of AF • Rickets • Congenital hypothyroidism • Malnutrition • Osteogenesis imperfecta • Achondroplasia • Down’s syndrome • Trisomies
  • 152. • On Palpation suture lines are not easily palpable after six months of age , but in hydrocephalus they remain palpably seperated
  • 153. Small fontanel • Craniosynostosis(look for ridging of suture lines ) • Variation of normal
  • 154. Sunken Fontanel • Dehydration usually when 10% weight is lost
  • 155. Bulging Fontanel 1.Raised ICT  Maningitis , SDH , IC bleed , ICSOL , As the ICT raises AF pulsation decrease and ultimately vanish Note that absent AF pulsation can be normal but in that case it will not be bulging
  • 156. • 2. Hydrocephalus  AF may be bulging and non pulsatile or pulsation may reduce from what was there previously • Scalp veins appear prominent 3. Crying child 4. Benign Intracranial Hypertension
  • 157. Benign Intracranial Hypertension • Nalidixic acid • Tetracycline • Vitamin A Toxicity • Infections like Exanthem Subitum
  • 158. Cephalic Index • Head width /Head length * 100 Cephalic index Interpretation <76 DOLICHOCEPHALY 76 – 80.9 NORMAL >/= 81 BRACHYCEPHALY
  • 159. Asymmetry of shape of head • Dolichocephaly/ Scaphocephaly • Brachycephaly • Plagiocephaly • Trigonocephaly • Turricephaly /Oxycephaly / Acrocephaly
  • 160. Dolichocephaly /Scaphocephaly • Increased AP diameter • Here the sagittal suture closes early
  • 161. Brachycephaly • Premature fusion of coronal suture • Transverse diameter is more • Occiput may be flat as in Brachycephaly of Down’s syndrome
  • 162. Plagiocephaly • Head shape is assymmetric due to premature fusion of sutures unilaterally • Eg:- Premature unilateral fusion of coronal or lamdoid suture or both
  • 163. Trigonocephaly • Triangular Transverse plane often with Ocular hypotelorism • Prominent mid frontal ridging due to premature fusion of metopic suture
  • 164. Turricephaly • Skull is high , narrow and tower shaped • Head is tower shaped with short AP diameter , high forehead and flat occiput • Due to premature fusion of many sutures ( usually 4 or more ) • It is found in Apert syndrome
  • 165. Apert syndrome • Apert syndrome is a form of acrocephalosyndactyly, a congenital disorder characterized by malformations of the skull, face, hands and feet. It is classified as a branchial arch syndrome, affecting the first branchial (or pharyngeal) arch, the precursor of the maxilla and mandible. Disturbances in the development of the branchial arches in fetal development create lasting and widespread effects. • In 1906, Eugène Apert, a French physician, described nine people sharing similar attributes and characteristics.Linguistically, "acro" is Greek for "peak", referring to the "peaked" head that is common in the syndrome. "Cephalo", also from Greek, is a combining form meaning "head". "Syndactyly" refers to webbing of fingers and toes.
  • 166. Scalp swelling • Dermoid • Histiocytosis • Osteoma • Organized cephalhematoma • Secondary deposits • Traumatic
  • 167. Seborrhoeic dermatitis of scalp • Yellow crusted plaques in scalp • Cradle cap
  • 168. Cephalhematoma • Sub periosteal collection of blood • Due to elevation of periosteum • Does not cross the suture line s • Reaches maximum size by 3rd day • Usually the parietal bone is most commonly affected • When B/L it may be associated with skull # • Disappears by 3-6 weeks /calcified /and then remodels
  • 169. Caput succedaneum • Diffuse , soft , boggy , swelling of the scalp • Seen at time of birth • Crosses suture lines • Disappears by 1- 2 days
  • 170. Cranial bossing • It is the prominence of central part of parietal and frontal bones • When frontal bone alone is involved it is called frontal bossing
  • 171. Causes • Rounded prominence in the centre of the parietal and frontal bones may be an early manifestation of rickets • Hydrocephalus • Congenital syphilis • Thalassaemia • Cleidocranial dysostosis • Hurler’s syndrome • Achondroplasia
  • 172. Hurler syndrome • Hurler syndrome, also known as mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I), Hurler's disease, also gargoylism, is a genetic disorder that results in the buildup of glycosaminoglycans (formerly known as mucopolysaccharides) due to a deficiency of alpha-L iduronidase, an enzyme responsible for the degradation of mucopolysaccharides in lysosomes. Without this enzyme, a buildup of heparan sulfate and dermatan sulfate occurs in the body. Symptoms appear during childhood and early death can occur due to organ damage.
  • 173. Head tilt / Torticollis • Local painful conditions /sternomastoid “tumour” • Compensation of visual defect /strabismus • Herniation of cerebellar tonsils • Klippel Feil deformity • Dystonic reaction to drugs •
  • 174. Klippel Feil syndrome • Klippel – Feil syndrome is a rare disease, initially reported in 1912 by Maurice Klippel and André Feil from France , characterized by the congenital fusion of any 2 of the 7 cervical vertebrae. The syndrome occurs in a heterogeneous group of patients unified only by the presence of a congenital defect in the formation or segmentation of the cervical spine. Klippel–Feil syndrome can be identified by shortness of the neck. Those with the syndrome have a very low hairline and the ability of the neck to move is limited.
  • 175. Head tilt • Both occiput and chin are deviated to same side Torticollis • Occiput is tilted to one side and chin is shifted to other side
  • 176. Scalp hair • Colour and texture • White hair  Albinism • Malnutrition  sparse , straight , thin ,easily pluckable , lack luster , grey or red shcked , or alternatively depigmented and pigmented called flag sign • Flag sign  in kwashiorkor , where there is alternating periods of abnormal and normal nutrition
  • 177. Hypopigmented hair • SAM • Albinism • PKU
  • 178. Hair in Microcephaly • Frontal upsweep of hair • “cow lick” • May be seen
  • 179. Alopecia • Congenital ectodermal dysplasia • Chemotherapy and radiation • Localised area of hair loss  Alopecia aerata, over scars, fungal infections , also psychological (trichotillomania )
  • 180. Hypertrichosis • Cushing syndrome • deLange syndrome • Precocious puberty • Drugs  minoxidil , dilantin , androgens • Familial
  • 181. Low hair line • Extending below the spine of C4 • Turner’s sundrome • Low hairline in front  Hypothyroidism • Hair is coarse and sparse in hypothyroidism • Low hairline in back  can be a feature of short neck  Klippel Feil syndrome • Excess projection of hair into the cheek is seen in Treacher Collins syndrome
  • 182. Treacher Collins syndrome • Treacher Collins syndrome (TCS), also known as Treacher Collins–Franceschetti syndrome, or mandibulofacial dysostosis, is a rare autosomal dominant congenital disorder characterized by craniofacial deformities, such as absent cheekbones. Treacher Collins syndrome is found in about one in 50,000 births. The typical physical features include downward-slanting eyes, micrognathia (a small lower jaw), conductive hearing loss, underdeveloped zygoma, drooping part of the lateral lower eyelids, and malformed or absent ears.
  • 183. Sparse or absent hair • Unhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia
  • 184. Kinky hair • Menkes Kinky hair syndrome
  • 185. Menkes kinky hair syndrome • Menkes disease (MNK), also called Menkes syndrome, copper transport disease, steely hair disease, kinky hair disease, or Menkes kinky hair syndrome, is a disorder that affects copper levels in the body] leading to copper deficiency. It is an x-linked recessive disorder, and is therefore considerably more common in males: females require two defective alleles to develop the disease. • The disorder was originally described by John Hans Menkes (1928–2008) et al. in 1962.
  • 186. Craniotabes • Thin, parchment like , soft , mushy areas of skin that indents like ping pong ball • Physiological upto 3 months • Should be elicited away from the suture lines , as it may be normally elicitable near the suture lines
  • 187. Craniotabes • Rickets • Congenital syphilis • Osteogenesis imperfecta • Hydrocephalus
  • 188. Face • Myopathic facies • Moon facies • Puffy facies • Coarse facies • Mask like facies • Triangular facies
  • 189. Myopathic facies • Long drawn and thin neck facies
  • 190. Moon face • Rounded face • Normal in obese • Cushing syndrome
  • 191. Puffy face • Oedema • Nephrotic syndrome • Hypothyroidism  bit puffy with dull expression
  • 192. Coarse facies • Hypothyroidism • Mucopolysacharidosis (Hurler’s) • Gangliosidosis • Sotos syndrome • Williams syndrome
  • 193. William’s syndrome • Williams syndrome (WS), also known as Williams–Beuren syndrome (WBS), is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by: a distinctive, "elfin" facial appearance, along with a low nasal bridge; an unusually cheerful demeanor and ease with strangers; developmental delay coupled with strong language skills; and cardiovascular problems, such as supravalvular aortic stenosis and transient hypercalcaemia. • It is caused by a deletion of about 26 genes from the long arm of chromosome 7 . The syndrome was first identified in 1961 by New Zealander J.C.P. Williams and has an estimated prevalence of 1 in 7,500 to 1 in 20,000 births.
  • 194. Mask like facies • Face is expression less • Wilson’s disease and other diseases affecting EPS • Tranquilizer overdose • Mobius syndrome (neuroparalysis) • Infantile botulsim (neuroparalysis) • Depression • Myotonic dystrophy
  • 195. Mobius syndrome • Möbius syndrome (also spelled Moebius) is an extremely rare congenital neurological disorder which is characterized by facial paralysis and the inability to move the eyes from side to side. Most people with Möbius syndrome are born with complete facial paralysis and cannot close their eyes or form facial expressions. Limb and chest wall abnormalities sometimes occur with the syndrome. People with Möbius syndrome have normal intelligence, although their lack of facial expression is sometimes incorrectly taken to be due to dullness or unfriendliness. It is named for Paul Julius Möbius, a neurologist who first described the syndrome in 1888
  • 196. Triangular facies • Variation of normal • Russel silver syndrome • Turner’s syndrome
  • 197. Hemolytic facies • Typically in Beta thalassemia • Frontal bossing • Depressed bridge of nose • Maxillary prominence • Prominent malar eminence • Protruding malaligned teeth
  • 198. Adenoid facies • Protruding perioral area • With partially open mouth • No changes over maxilla or frontal bones
  • 199. Absent DAOM • Depressor anguli oris muscle • Its congenital absence produces  assymetric lowering of lower lip during crying • Can be seen in normal children • Has association with heart disease
  • 200. Depressed nasal bridge • Normal in certain races • Down’s syndrome • Congenital syphilis (called saddle nose) • Late stage of leprosy
  • 201. Short columella • Short columella pulls down the nasal tip and distorts the nose and gives flat appearance to the nose
  • 202. Hypoplasia of ala nasi • Gives a pinched appearance and produces beak nose
  • 203. Broad nasal bridge • Implies palpable widening of nasal bones
  • 204. Epistaxis • Trauma • Rhinitis • FB • Polyps • Diphtheria • HTN • Bleeding disorders
  • 205. Micrognathia • Pierre Robin syndrome • Treacher collins syndrome • Sequle of long standing juvenile RA • Cri du chat syndrome • Di George syndrome • Foetal alcohol syndrome • Rubinstein Taybi syndrome • Russel silver syndrome
  • 206. Prognathism • Angelman syndrome • Fragile X syndrome • Acromegaly
  • 207. Eyes • Eye ball tension • Palpate with index finger with eye closed • Increased in glaucoma • And reduced in dehydration
  • 208. Lip edema • Part of generalised edema ( Nephritis , NS , cardiac failure, kwashiorkor) • Severe cough and excessive crying • Local causes  conjunctivitis , stye • Angioedema • Dermatomyositis • Hypothyroidism • IMN (occassionally)
  • 209. Microphthalmos • Reduction in size of all ocular structures • Congenital infections  CMV , Rubella , Toxoplasmosis • Goldenhar syndrome • CHARGE syndrome • Microphthalmia with colobomata is usualy an AD inheritance
  • 210. Eye lid colobomas • Eyelid defects • Lower eyelid  Tracher collins syndrome • Upper eyelid  Goldenhar’s syndrome • CHARGE • Coloboma  developmental defect of any protion of eye ( MC iris)
  • 211. Ptosis • Transient in new born • Congenital ptosis ( U/L or B/L ) • Oculomotor palsy • Horner’s syndrome • Myasthenia gravis • Noonan syndrome • Myotonic dystrophy • Local eye lesions like edema of lids
  • 212. Proptosis • Malignancies  Neuroblastoma , Leukemia , Retinoblastoma , chloroma of AML , Langerhan cell histiocytosis • Cavernous hemangioma , Optic nerve glioma • Craniostenostosis  Apert’s syndrome , Crouzon’s syndrome • Hyperthyroidism
  • 213. Epicanthic fold • It is a crescent shaped fold of skin , originating below the eye and sweeps upwards to blend with upper eye lid so that the inner canthus is covered • Tends to disappear as the bridge of nose get elevated with the growth of child • So flat nasal bridge gives extra skin to show up as a fold
  • 214. • Another reason  syndromes with loose skin • Unilateral epicanthic fold  torticollis • Classic in down syndrome • Races  but not so prominent to cover the inner portion of both lids
  • 215. • Seen in some normal newborns , disappears by 1-3 months , as the bridge of the nose grows • Down’s syndrome , Noonan’s syndrome ,Turner’s syndrome , De lange syndrome , Smith- Lemli- Optiz syndrome , Ehler Danlos syndrome , Cri du chat syndrome , William’ s syndome , Foetal alcohol syndrome , Foetal hydantoin syndrome
  • 216. Mangloid slant • Slant is upwards • Slanting from medial to lateral • Racial • Down’s syndorme • Prader Willi syndrome
  • 217. Anti mangloid slant • Down ward slanting of eyes • Treacher Collins syndrome • Noonan syndrome • Turner’s syndorme • Apert’s syndrome • Edward syndrome
  • 218. • Down ward slant under growth of maxilla laterally • Upward slant  under growth of midline part of anterior frontal brain
  • 219. Hypertelorism • Distance between the medial canthus of two eyes is more than the width of each eyes • Part of many syndromes • Noonan , , Turner , Apert , Crouzen , Williams , Zellweger , • Normal variation
  • 220. • Standard defenition • Inerpupillary distance(orbital spacing ) is measured in forward gaze and plotted • > 3 SD is hypertelorsim
  • 221. Telecanthus • Displacement of inner canthi laterally, eventhough the orbital spacing is normal • There is reduction or absent visible sclera medial to the iris along with lateral displacement of lacrimal puncta
  • 222. • Hypertelorism  may be due to hypertrophy of lesser wing of sphenoid • Hypertelorism ( Canthal Index)  Distance between inner canthi divided by distance between outer canthi >0.38
  • 223. • Hypotelorism Distance between inner canthi divide by distance between outer canthi <0.32
  • 224. Synorphrys • Eye brows meeting each other in midline • Normal • Cornelia De Lange syndrome
  • 225. Eyelashes • Sparse in hypothyroidism • Long eyelashes normal • No association with TB
  • 227. Heterochromia • Assymetry of colour of iris • Congenital horner’s syndrome • Secondary to inflammation of the eye • Sporadic
  • 228. Chediac higashi syndrome • Hypopigmentation of eyes , Skin and hair • Recurrent bacterial infection • Mild bleeding diathesis
  • 229. Aniridia • Absent iris , usually B/L • Photophobia • Impaired visual acuity • Association with Wilm’s tumour  Children with aniridia should be checked for Chromosome 11 deletion • May be familial • May be associated with hemihypertrophy
  • 230. Blue sclera • Normal newborn or small infants • Osteogenesis imperfecta • Ehler Danlos syndrome
  • 231. White’s eye reflex or cat’s eye reflex • Normally when light is shown through the pupil a red flare is seen • Here it may be absent and pupil may appear white • Reflex can arise from lens , uveal tract and retina • MC cause is cataract • Retinoblastoma , ROP
  • 232. Other findings … • Cataract • Buphthalmos(congenital glaucoma) • Optic atrophy • Papilloedema • RP • KF ring • Strabismus • Setting sun sign
  • 233. Ears Low set ears • An imaginary line joining medial and lateral canthi is extended towards the ear • Normally 1/3rd of ear comes above this line • When less than 20% is above , it is said to be low set ears • A line through the lateral canthus should cut the insertion of auricle on the side of the head
  • 234. • Small low set ears are seen in Down’s syndrome • Large prominent  Marfan’s , Fragile X , • Deformed pinna  treacher Collins , Goldenhar’s syndome
  • 235. Low set ears • Apert’s syndrome • Carpenter’s syndorme • Di George syndrome • Noonan’s syndrome • Potter’s syndrome • Trisomy 13 • Trisomy 18 • Turner’s syndrome • And many dysmorphic syndromes
  • 236. Protuberant ear • The normal ear makes an angle of no more than 10 degree with the scalp • > 15 degrees is protuberant • > 20 degrees is Posterior rotation of pinna
  • 237. Bat ear • Protruding ear with poorly formed folds of helix
  • 238. Pre auricular tags • Firm as it contains a bit of cartilage • Benign condition • Hearing assessment may be considered • Pre auricular pits are generally benign and run in families • Ask about discharge / hearing loss • U/L large ear may be positional , like Torticollis
  • 239. • Microtia  most children with microtia will have hearing loss • Crumpled pinna • Tragus sign • AOM • Deafness
  • 240. Nose • Broad nasal root  I. Craniofrontonasal dysplasia II. GM1 Gangliosidosis • Squared nasal root  Di George syndrome
  • 241. Anteverted nose • Acrodysostosis • When the dorsum of nose is very short , nasal tip is pulled upwards and this results in anteverted nose
  • 242. Beaked nose • Unusually pointed prominent nose • Or nose with poorly developed ala nasi so that the nasal septum is seen more prominent • Seckel syndrome • Trisomies • Algille syndrome
  • 243. Mouth • Normally mouth is constructed such that outer edges of the lips fall on pependicular dropped from the centre of either pupil when eyes looking straight ahead • When edges fall outside  macrostomia • Microstomia
  • 244. • Large mouth  Goldenhar syndrome • Mandibular hypoplasia  Pierre Robin syndrome • Angular stomatitis  Riboflavin deficiency , congenital syphilis
  • 245. Philtreum • A long nose results in short philtrum and a short nose results in long philtrum • Long philtrum  William’s syndrome , Cornelia de Lange syndrome • Short philtrum  Foetal alcohol syndrome • Multiple frenulum  Ellis van Creveld syndrome
  • 246. Palate • High arched  if the roof of palate is not seen when the examiner’s eye is at the level of upper incisor teeth and patient keeping mouth wide open • Prominent palatal ridging is due to poor tongue thrusting of the baby which can be due to neurological deficits resulting in poor sucking
  • 247. • Ridges make the palate look very narrow • Cleft palate  isolated anomaly , trisomy18 , Pierre Robin syndrome, Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome , Foetal hydantoin syndrome • Look for isolated cleft lip if there is nasal twang of voice • Submucous cleft will have to be palpated for
  • 248. • Bifid uvula  Apert’s syndrome , Di George syndrome , Treacher collin syndrome • Painful ulcers  HZV • Herpangioma produces painful ulcers in oropharynx , soft palate and uvula
  • 249. Drooling • Normal during teething • Stomatitis • Acute Epiglottitis /Diphtheria / Tonsillitis /Herpangioma • Pseudobulbar palsy
  • 250. Dry mouth • Dehydration • Mouth breathing • Antihistamines • Atropine like drugs
  • 251. Oral thrush • Antibiotics • Steroids • AIDS • Hypoparathyroidism
  • 252. Trismus • Tetanus • Infantile Gaucher’s disease • Part of dystonia (metaclopramide poisoning ) • TMJ arthritis (JRA) • Encephalitis
  • 253. Cry • Shrill cry in CNS insults like meningitis • Cat like mewing cry  Cri du chat syndrome • Weak cry in Neuromuscular disorders  Werdnig Hoffman syndrome • Crying on handling  painful condtions like arthritis , # , meningitis • Hoarse cry  hypothyroidism , laryngitis
  • 254. Teeth • Delayed dentition • No teeth upto 13 month of age is considered as delayed dentition • Constitutional delay • Hypothyroidism • Hypopituitarism • Rickets • PEM
  • 255. Discoloured teeth • Poor oral hygiene • Tetracycline therapy (Brownish) • Enamel hypoplasia (Brownish) • Kernicterus ( Brownish) • Porphyria ( reddish) • Iron Therapy ( blackish) • Endemic Fluorosis ( Chalk white pathces , or dull unglazed tooth , pitting etc)
  • 256. Gum Hyperplasia • Poor oral hygiene • Dilantin therapy • Acute Monocytic Leukemia • Scurvy • Epulis • Delayed dentition • Nursing caries
  • 257. • Blue line across ridges of gum  lead poisoning • Swollen , spongy , bleeding gums  scurvy • Neonatal teeth  normal varient , Ellis van Creveld syndrome
  • 258. Tongue • Macroglossia a. Congenital hypothyroidism b. Down’s syndrome c. Beckwith Wiedmann syndrome d. Local causes  Cystic hygroma, hemangioma e. Hurler’s syndrome ,GSD type 2 f. Tongue protrusion without macroglossia occur in MR g. Foote’s sign  rhythmic protrusion of tongue in newborn period suggest ICH , cerebral edema
  • 259. Coating of tongue • Poor oral hygiene • Typhoid fever • Uremia
  • 260. Ulcer of the frenulum • In severe cough , like whooping cough ( due to mechanical injury )
  • 261. • Smooth bald tongue without papillae may be seen in Vitamin B12 deficiency • Geographical tongue shows reddis areas of desquamation
  • 262. Neck • Short neck Ratio between neck length : Height Normal  1:13 >13 short neck Neck length  distance between external occipital protuberane and C7 spine
  • 263. Short neck • Turner’s syndrome • Noonan’s syndrome • Morquio syndrome • Down’s syndrome • Klippel-Feil deformity • Sprangel’s deformity • Platybasia • Hypothyroidism • Hurler’s syndrome
  • 264. Goitre • Puberty • Iodine deficiency • Hashimotos • TPO Deficiency • Grave’s disease
  • 265. Webbing of neck • Turner’s syndorme • Noonan’s syndrome
  • 266. Opisthotonus • Kernicterus • Tetanus • Meningitis • Infantile Gaucher’s disease • Part of dystonia ( metoclopramide poisoning ) • Part of decerebration • Local causes  Retropharyngeal abscess
  • 267. Typical postures • Epiglottitis  sitting up , leaning forward, preferred not to lie down • Peritonitis  lies quietly , does not move much • Meningitis  Lies on one side with thighs flexed abdomen , or opisthotonus posture • Lordotic posture  Muscular dystrophies , B/L Hip problem
  • 268. Chest • Clavicle  absent – cleidocraial dysostosis • Pre sternal edema may be found in mumps • Widely spread nipples may be seen in Turner’s syndrome  space between nipples is >25% of the chest circumference • Sheild shaped chest in Turner’s syndrome • Narrow thoracic cage  Ellis van Crevald syndrome , Jeune syndrome
  • 269. • Absecne of Pectoralis muscle  Poland syndrome • Sprengel’s deformity  High position of scapula with lower angle turned towards the spine • Gynaecomastia
  • 271. Upper limbs • Clinodactyly  absence of P2 of little finger  Down’s syndrome • Brachydactyly  Down’s syndrome , Achondroplasia , Prader Willi syndrome • Camptodactyly  Fixed flexion deformity of 5th finger  Normal , heritable , Down’s syndrome
  • 272. • Hypoplasia of the 4Th metacarpal is seen in Pseuodohypoparathyroidism • Here the ring finger will be shorter than the index finger • Reverse is true in normal children
  • 273. • Broad thumb  Rubinstein –Taybi syndrome • Bifid thumb  Holt oram , Fanconi • Arachnodactyly  unduly long fingers  Marfan syndrome , Homocystinuria , Hypogonadism , normal • Thumb sign  Marfan’s , absent in homocystinuria
  • 274. • Wrist sign  thumb and the fifth finger will overlap at wrist • Trident sign  in achondroplasia  thumb and fisrt two fingers …seperated from 4th and 5th fingers • Overriding finger’s  trisomy 18
  • 275. Polydactyly • Post axial  associated with little finger • Pre axial  associated with thumb • Polydactyly of four limbs  Ellis Van crevald syndrome • Laurence Moon Biedl syndrome
  • 276. Syndactyly • Can be complete or partial • Apert’s syndrome • Trisomy 13 • Smith Lemli Optiz syndrome • MC between 2nd and 3rd digits
  • 277. Others • Absent digits • Lobster hand • Absent thumb • Triphalangeal thumb • Osler’s nodes transient , small , pea sized , tender , nodules in pulp of fingers , toes , thenar/hypothenar eminences (IE) • Janeway lesions painless erythematous patches over palms and soles • Absent clavicle • Phocomelia
  • 278. Nail • Koilonychia • Half and half nail  CRF • White nail  anemia , hypoalbumenia • Red nail  Polycythemia • Blue lunule of nail  wilson’s disease
  • 279. • Capillary pulsations Severe AR • Nail fold telangectesia  Dermatomyositis , SS,SLE • Nail – Patella syndrome  • Hypoplastic nails  • Hyper convex nail Turenr’s , Noonan syndrome • Black nails  Addisons • Splinter haemorrhages  Infective E
  • 280. • Koilonychia soft , thin , brittile ,flattened , or concave (spoon shaped) , nail seen in iron defieciency • May not be seen uniformily in all nails • Can be inherited also
  • 281. Dermatiglyphics • Down’s syndrome  single palmar crease • Kennedy crease  a deep sole crease between first and second toe
  • 282. Lower limbs • Valgus  directed away from midline • Cubitus valgus/varus • Coxa varus/valgus • Genu valgus/ varus • Both Genu varus and valgus is physiological in children upto 1.5 to 2 years
  • 283. • Genu recurvatum  hyperextension of the knee joint • Pesplanus /flat foot  physiological in 1.5 to 2 years • Pes cavus/claw foot • Talipus equino varus  foot is adducted downwards and inwards with medial concavity • Hallux valgus/varus
  • 284. thanku