Clinical Insight: Pediatric Traps
A high-yield pediatric crossword built to test rapid recognition of presentations that can deteriorate quickly when missed or mismanaged.
Test your pediatric pattern recognition through a high-yield clinical crossword focused on emergency presentations, classic board-style clues, and rapid decision-making traps. Complete the puzzle below, then unlock the Clinical Insight explanations afterward.
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Pattern recognition: Pediatric conditions that punish delay
This challenge moves across several high-yield pediatric traps. Use the mini-overviews below to reinforce the classic presentation, key clue, and first diagnostic or management move for each condition.
- Kawasaki disease: fever for 5 or more days with conjunctival injection, cracked lips, cervical lymphadenopathy, extremity changes, and polymorphous rash should trigger recognition. Timely IVIG reduces the risk of coronary artery aneurysms.
- Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis: projectile nonbilious vomiting, visible peristaltic waves, and a young infant point to pyloric stenosis. Abdominal ultrasound is the preferred initial imaging test.
- Intussusception: episodic inconsolable crying, vomiting, intermittent lethargy, and dark gelatinous stool suggest telescoping bowel. Air-contrast enema is diagnostic and therapeutic in stable infants.
- Epiglottitis: high fever, drooling, muffled voice, and tripod positioning are airway red flags. Secure the airway first, then give empiric intravenous antibiotics.
- Measles: cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, Koplik spots, and a descending maculopapular rash form the classic pattern. Vitamin A is used as adjunctive therapy in children to reduce morbidity and ocular complications.
- IgA vasculitis: nonblanching lower-extremity rash with abdominal pain and joint swelling after an upper respiratory infection suggests IgA-mediated small-vessel vasculitis. Corticosteroids may be used for severe abdominal pain or renal involvement.
- Airway trap: drooling, tripod positioning, muffled voice, and toxic appearance should trigger concern for supraglottic airway infection and airway-first management.
- Vomiting infant trap: projectile nonbilious vomiting suggests pyloric stenosis, while episodic crying with currant-jelly stool points toward intussusception.
- Fever-rash trap: mucocutaneous findings, conjunctival injection, cracked lips, rash, and lymphadenopathy should raise concern for Kawasaki disease and timely IVIG therapy.
- Vasculitis trap: nonblanching lower-extremity rash with abdominal pain and joint symptoms after a viral illness suggests IgA vasculitis.
References
- 1. Marrakchi S, Laridi A, Bouanane R, Allali N, Chat L, El Haddad S. Acute colocolic intussusception: A rare pediatric presentation. Radiol Case Rep. 2024;20(1):505-508. Published 2024 Nov 4. doi:10.1016/j.radcr.2024.10.057. Accessed November 21, 2024.
- 2. Endom EE, Dorfman SR, Olivé AP. Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. In: Nagler J, ed. UpToDate. Hoppin AG, ed. Waltham, MA: UpToDate Inc. https://www.uptodate.com. Accessed July 15, 2025.
- 3. Barman P, Pilania RK, Cv G, Thangaraj A, Arora M, Singh S. Treatment intensification in Kawasaki disease - current perspectives. Expert Rev Clin Immunol. 2024;20(10):1179-1191. doi:10.1080/1744666X.2024.2378900. Accessed March 8, 2025.
- 4. INFECTIONS OF THE LARYNX AND EPIGLOTTIS. In: Kasper DLD, Fauci ASA, Hauser SLS, et al, eds. Harrison's Manual of Medicine. McGraw Hill Inc.; 2020. https://harrisons.unboundmedicine.com/harrisons/view/Harrisons-Manual-of-Medicine/623575/0/INFECTIONS_OF_THE_LARYNX_AND_EPIGLOTTIS. Accessed September 22, 2024.
- 5. RUBELLA (GERMAN MEASLES). In: Kasper DLD, Fauci ASA, Hauser SLS, et al, eds. Harrison's Manual of Medicine. McGraw Hill Inc.; 2020. https://harrisons.unboundmedicine.com/harrisons/view/Harrisons-Manual-of-Medicine/623268/all/rubella. Accessed December 26, 2024.
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