front 1 Chronological or Postnatal age | back 1 Age of infant calculated in days/weeks or months from the date of birth |
front 2 Gestational age | back 2 Estimated time since conception |
front 3 Corrected age | back 3 Age adjusted for prematurity |
front 4 Postmenstrual age | back 4 Is the gestational age plus the chronological age and is reported in weeks |
front 5 Full term infant | back 5 37-42 weeks of gestation |
front 6 Preterm infant | back 6 <37 weeks of gestation |
front 7 Post term infant | back 7 >42 weeks of gestation |
front 8 Low birth weight | back 8 2.5 kg |
front 9 Very low birth weight | back 9 1.5 kg |
front 10 Extremally low birth weight | back 10 1 kg |
front 11 Small for gestational age | back 11 Weight <10th percentile |
front 12 Appropriate for gestational age | back 12 Weight between 10th and 90th percentiles |
front 13 Large for gestational age | back 13 Weight >90th percentile |
front 14 Growth charts for children with special health care | back 14
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front 15 50th means | back 15 Avarage |
front 16 <3rd & >97th | back 16 Nutritional risk |
front 17 -1< z score <0 | back 17 normal |
front 18 -2< z score<-1 | back 18 mild malnutrition |
front 19 -3< z score <-2 | back 19 moderate malnutrition |
front 20 -3 > z score | back 20 sever malnutrition |
front 21
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front 22 Term infants weight changes | back 22 May lose 7% to 10% of birth weight |
front 23 Preterm infant weight changes | back 23 May lose ≤15%of birth weight |
front 24 Extremely low birth infants weight changes | back 24 May lose<20% of birth weight |
front 25 Significant weight loss is considered in the following situation | back 25
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front 26 Waterlow criteria is used for | back 26 distinguishing malnutrition as acute (wasting) versus chronic (stunting) in children 1 to 3 years old. |
front 27 Failure to thrive has been defined as | back 27
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front 28 Causes of failure to thrive | back 28 Organic • Presence of an underlying medical cause. Inorganic • Nutritional, Psychological, social, or economic cause. |
front 29 Goals of medical nutrition therapy for failure to thrive | back 29
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front 30 Total energy needs for catch-up growth When do we use catch up growth? | back 30
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front 31 Estimating energy needs for children with developmental disabilities | back 31
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front 32 Estimating energy needs for premature infants | back 32
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front 33 Some important areas to focus on in the dietary assessment include: | back 33
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front 34 how much does human milk contains of calories approximately ? | back 34 20 kcal/30 ml |
front 35 Recommended feeding schedule | back 35
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front 36 Contraindications to breastfeeding | back 36
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front 37 Assessment of the adequacy of feeding | back 37
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