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Dr. CCHMC Pediatric Surgery

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Pyloric Stenosis

Video Published 2020-05-01 Updated 2026-04-14

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Topic Overview

Comprehensive review of pyloric stenosis covering pathophysiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, and management. Discusses the characteristic hypochloremic hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis, ultrasound diagnostic criteria (3mm thickness, 15mm length), and differential diagnosis of nonbilious vomiting in infants.

Key Takeaways

  • Pyloric stenosis presents with progressive nonbilious projectile vomiting in infants 2-10 weeks old; classic lab finding is hypochloremic hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis
  • Ultrasound is gold standard for diagnosis: pyloric muscle thickness ≥3mm and length ≥15mm (remember pi: 3.14)
  • Surgery is never emergent—always correct dehydration and electrolyte abnormalities first before proceeding to pyloromyotomy
  • Physical exam may reveal palpable epigastric 'olive' mass; severe dehydration increases apnea risk requiring careful preoperative resuscitation
  • Prevalence is 1-4 per 1000 live births in Caucasians with male predominance (2:1 to 5:1); increased risk in firstborns with positive family history

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