What are some differentials for bruising in children?
What questions should you ask in the history about bruising?
What investigations need to be done for children with unexplained bruising (not suspected to be NAI)?
What are some differentials for lymphadenopathy in children?
What are some drugs that can cause lymphadenopathy?
What questions should you ask in the history when a child has unexplained lymphadenopathy?
ALWAYS ASK ABOUT B SYMPTOMS
What examination should you do when a child has unexplained lymphadenopathy?
What are some red flags for lymphadenopathy in children?
• >2cm
• Unexplained fever or night sweats, unexplained weight loss, chest pain)
What are the most common malignancies associated with lymphadenopathy in children?
Worrying features: firm, indurated, fixed and matted lymph nodes that are usually not tender
<6: Acute leukaemia, Neuroblastoma, Rhabdomyosarcoma, Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
>6: Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and Rhabdomyosarcoma
If a child has reactive lymphadenopathy, what information should you give to the parent?
Reassure that this is a normal response to infection
Likely to slowly decrease over time, though this may take 2-4 weeks
It is normal for the lymph nodes to get bigger and smaller in future with intercurrent infections.
How does cervical lymphadenitis present and how is it treated?
When does lymphadenopathy need to be urgently referred in children?
Referral to rapid access clinic
•B symptoms
What investigations are done for suspected leukaemia/lymphoma because of the sign lymphadenopathy?
Bloods
Imaging
If blood malignancy is ruled out with lymphadenopathy what are some other blood tests you can do for a cause?
What are some differentials for pallor in children?
What are causes of pancytopenia in children? (image important)
What are some clinical features of pancytopenia?
Think low RBC, WBC, platelets and the effects of that are pallor, infection and bleeding
What are the commonest childhood cancers?
What are the two main types of leukaemia in children and what age group are they most common in?
What is the epidemiology and risk factors for ALL?
Epidemiology
Risk Factors
What is the pathophysiology of ALL?
Combination of genetic susceptibility and environmental exposure. Infection with virus may be trigger event
Proliferation of malignant lymphoid progenitor cells in the bone marrow in B-Cell (majority) or T-Cell Lineage
Proliferating malignant cells infiltrate and replace normal lines of haematopoietic cells in bone marrow resulting in their suppression so pancytopenia.
Infiltration can also occur in lymph nodes, liver, spleen
What are some cytogenetic associations with ALL?
How may a child with ALL present?
Bone marrow failure
General symptoms
What are some some differentials for the symptoms in ALL?