Pediatric Growth and Development
- Objective
- To be familiar with normal growth and milestone development
- Early identification of children with growth retardation or milestone delays
- Growth
- Continuous dynamic process which continues from conception to maturity
- Development
- Maturation of organ systems
- Acquisition of skills
- Ability to perform tasks
- How doe we study Growth and Development
- Serial evaluation
- Height
- Weight
- Head circumference
- Direct observation
- Screening tests
- Reports from parents and caregivers
- Developmental milestones
- AAP recommends that all infants and young children should be screened for developmental delays
- Screening is designed for asymptomatic patients
- Brief assessment to identify children who need more intensive studies or treatment
- Factors that influence growth
- Intrinsic
- Genetics
- Heredity
- Chronic illness
- Extrinsic
- Parenteral involvement
- Socioeconomic status
- Climate
- Toxins/hazardous substances
- Nature vs. Nurture
- Biologic influences
- Teratogens, post-partum illnesses, hazardous substances, chronic illnesses
- Psychologic influences
- Adult caregivers who respond to verbal and nonverbal clues given by a child
- Social
- Birth order, culture, society, extended family
0-1y.o. / 2-3y.o. / 3-6y.o. / 6-12y.o. / 12-18y.o.
Freud / Oral / Anal / Oedipal / Latency / Adolescence
Erikson / Basic trust / Autonomy vs. shame/doubt / Initiative vs. guilt / Industry vs. inferiority / Identity vs. identity diffusion
Piaget / Sensorimotor I-IV / Sensorimotor V-VI / Pre-operational / Concrete operational / Formal operational
- Fetal Growth and Development
- Embryonic period
- 6 days post conception- blastocyst
- 2 weeks- endoderm, ectoderm
- 3 weeks- neural tube, blood vessels, heart tubes
- 5th week- forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain form
- 4-8 weeks- budding arms and legs, brain grows rapidly, facial structures
- Fetal period- 9-40 weeks
- Increase in cell numbers, remodeling of organ systems
- 10 weeks- human face
- 12 weeks- external genitalia, lungs begin to develop
- 20-24 weeks- alveoli form, surfactant production
- Third trimester- weight triples, length doubles
- 26 weeks- eye opening
- Weight
- Doubles birth weight by 4-5 months
- Triples by 1 year
- Formula
- Weight 1-6 y.o.= age (yrs) x 5+17
- Weight 7-12 y.o.= age (yrs) x 7+5
- Height
- Birth- 20”
- 1 year- add 10”
- 2nd year grows 5”
- 3rd year grows 3-4”
- Grows 2-3”/year until puberty
- Respiratory System
- Infants have a rounded chest
- Respiratory rate decreases in childhood
- 1y.o. 30 breaths/min
- 2y.o. 25 breaths/min
- 8y.o. 20 breaths/min
- 15y.o. 18 breaths/min
- Sinuses
- Maxillary/ethmoid
- Sphenoid
- Mastoid
- Frontal
- Cardiovascular system
- Heart rate falls steadily throughout childhood
- Birth- 130bpm
- 2 y.o.- 105bpm
- 4y.o.- 90bpm
- 6y.o.- 80bpm
- 10y.o.- 70bpm
- Functional “innocent” murmur
- Systolic
- Peak age 6-9 y.o.
- Newborn murmur
- Peripheral arterial Pulmonic stenosis
- Still murmur
- Pulmonary ejection murmur
- Venous hum
- Hematopoietic System
- Fetal Hgb- persist for 1st few months of life
- Hematocrit
- 55% at birth, then physiologic nadir, then return to normal
- WBC’s
- Increased at birth with lymphocyte predominance
- Eosinophil count high during infancy
- Gastrointestinal Tract
- Liver and spleen palpable in infancy
- Abdomen protuberant
- Incomplete protein digestion
- Infants have faster transit time than adults
- Urinary Tract
- 1st week of life, urine scanty and dilute
- Urine volume
- 1st 24th 15-50ml/day
- 2 mos. – 250-400ml/day
- 5-8 y.o.- 700-1000ml/day
- 8-14 y.o.- 700-1500ml/day
- Musculoskeletal System
- Fat
- Laid down during 1st months of gestation
- Gradual decrease in body stores from 6 months-6 years
- Reaccumulates from 7 years to puberty when fat decrease in males and continues to increase in females
- Muscle
- Small portion of body weight compared to adults
- Extremities
- Short in infants
- Flat feet
- Bowing of legs
- Pigeon toes
- Posture
- Vision
- Birth- aware of light and dark
- 4 weeks- follow large object
- 8 weeks- follows moving object with jerky movement
- 20 weeks- pursues lost object
- 24 weeks- binocular vision established
- 40 weeks- interest in tiny objects
- 4-5 years- vision is 20/20
- Hearing
- Present at birth, not totally mature
- Audiological evaluation prior to leaving nursery
- Localize sounds by 6 months
- Sleep
- 1 week old- 16.5hrs/day
- 1 month old- 15.5hrs/day
- 3 month old- 15hrs/day
- 1 year old-13.75 hours/day
- 2 year old-13 hours/day
- 4 year old- 11.5 hours/day
- 17 year old- 8.25 hours/day
- Developmental Milestones
- 2 month old
- Recognize parents
- Social smile
- Beginning to visually fix on objects
- 4 month old
- Fading of moro, tonic neck and rooting reflex
- Sit up while propped
- Raise head 90 degrees while prone
- Roll from back to side
- Laugh
- Reach for objects with hands
- 6 month old
- Lift head, chest while prone
- Begin teething
- Roll back to belly
- Hold bottle
- Pick up dropped object
- Sit without support for short time
- Palmar grasp/wave bye-bye
- Firmly control head
- Babbles
- 9 month old
- Crawl/pull to stand
- Sit unsupported for prolonged period
- Pincer grasp
- Object constancy
- Separation anxiety
- 12 month old
- 6-8 teeth
- Walk without support or with 1 hand support
- Build tower with 2 blocks
- Says mama, papa, and 2 other words
- Follow one step verbal commands
- 18 month old
- Runs without coordination
- 4-20 word vocabulary
- Walk up stairs holding 1 hand
- Build tower with 3-4 blocks
- Push/pull toys
- Scribbling
- Feeds self
- “my”
- 24 month old
- 16 teeth
- Run with better coordination
- Kick and throw ball
- Build tower with 6-7 blocks
- Turn door knob
- 300 words
- 2-3 word phrase
- Can put on simple articles of clothing
- Jigsaw puzzle
- Point to named object
- 36 month old
- Good balance
- Daytime control of bowel/bladder
- Balance on 1 foot
- Alternating feet on stairs
- Build tower with >9 cubes
- 3-4 word sentences
- Copy circle
- Rides tricycle
- 4 year old
- Hop on 1 foot
- Throw ball overhand
- 4-5 word sentences
- Count to 4
- Sing and learn simple songs
- Can use safety scissor
- Right or left hand dominance
- 5 year old
- Catch ball
- Skip smoothly
- Simple chores at home
- Tie shoelaces
- 2100 words
- Knows coins
- Draws a person with 2 appendages
- Adolescence
- Begins and progresses across a wide range of chronological ages
- Both sexes have a growth spurt
- Females mature earlier than males
- Female Sexual Development
- Height
- Maximal height velocity occurs the year before menarche
- Menarche- average between 12-14 y.o.
- Breast development
- 9-11 y.o.
- Hypertrophy and breast budding
- 12-13 y.o.
- Further enlargement and pigmentation
- 16-18y.o.
- Mature, adult breast
- Pubic hair
- 10-12 y.o. appears initially
- Initially sparse, then abundant and curly
- Axillary hair
- 12-14 y.o.
- Acne
- 12-18 y.o.
- Male Sexual Development
- Breast
- 12-14 y.o. some hypertrophy
- Penis and Testes
- 10-12 y.o.- increase in size
- 14-15 y.o.- rapid growth and lengthening
- Pubic hair
- 12-14 y.o.- appears initially
- 14-15 y.o.- abundant and curly
- Axillary hair
- 13-16 y.o. initially appears
- Acne
- 14-18 y.o.
- Mature sperm
- 14-16 y.o.
- Development
- Continuous process beginning with conception
- Orderly and sequential= rapid growth/plateaus
- Not always constant
- As healthcare providers, we must
- Screen regularly to detect developmental dysfunction
- Monitor developmental problems
- Initiate proper referral and treatment
- Early intervention
- School system
- Developmental Disabilities- 16% of US children
- Cerebral palsy
- Mental retardation
- Autism
- ADHD
- Communicative disorders
- All different, but result in disruption of the normal sequence of development
- Denver Developmental Screening Test II (DDST II)
- Screening tool- compares child’s performance to other children of that age
- Relatively quick and inexpensive procedure
- Given to apparently asymptomatic population
- Identifies individuals with suspected developmental abnormalities who require diagnostic follow-up
- History
- Developed in 1967 and reconstructed in 1988
- Uses
- Designed for apparently well children from birth-6 years of age
- Assess a child’s performance by various age appropriate tasks
- Screens asymptomatic children for developmental delays
- Confirms intuitive suspicions with an objective measure
- DDST II is not
- An IQ test
- A predictor of future adaptive of intellectual ability
- Designed to generate diagnostic labels
- Performed at all well child visits as part of the physical exam
- 2,4,6,9,12,15,18,24,36 months old
- 4,5,6 years old
- 125 tasks arranged in 4 groups
- Personal-social
- Fine motor adaptive
- Language
- Gross motor adaptive
- Scoring
- Some tasks are directly observed by physician while other must be reported from parents/caregivers
- “P” or pass means the child successfully performs the task or the caregiver reports that the child does the task
- “F” or fail, the child does not successfully perform the task or the caregiver reports that the child does not do the task
- “No” for no opportunity for the child to perform the activity due to caregiver restrictions
- “R” for refusal- child refuses to attempt the item
- Delays- suspect in 1 or more delays or 1 delay and a caution; 2 or more delays refer
- Failed or refused item that falls completely to the left of the age line (90% of children younger can do this task)
- Caution
- Failed or refused items that run on line or between 75-90%
- Interpretation
- Normal
- No delays
- maximum of 1 caution
- Suspect
- 1 or more delays
- Rescreen in 1-2 weeks to rule out temporary problems
- Referral
- 2 or more delays
- Early intervention
- Available for all children, regardless of socioeconomic background
- However, child must be identified as having a developmental delay by a healthcare practitioner before receiving services
- 16% of children in US have a disability
- Speech, learning, emotional, behavioral
- Identification is the key!!!!