8 Clinical Features of Hypertrophic Pyloric Stenosis (HPS) — High-Yield Notes

hypertropic pyloric stenosis

Definition

  • Hypertrophy + hyperplasia of pyloric muscle → gastric outlet obstruction in infants.

Epidemiology

  • Age: 2–8 weeks (classically 3–6 weeks)
  • More common in:
    • First-born males
    • Formula-fed infants
    • Positive family history
  • Associated with macrolide exposure (e.g., erythromycin)

Pathology

  • Thickened pyloric muscle narrows pyloric canal.
  • Causes obstruction to gastric emptying.

Clinical Features

Classic Triad

  1. Projectile non-bilious vomiting
  2. Visible gastric peristalsis
  3. Olive-shaped mass in epigastrium/right upper abdomen
pyloric stenosis

Other Findings

  • Hungry after vomiting (“hungry vomiter”)
  • Weight loss/dehydration
  • Constipation
  • Failure to thrive

Why Vomiting is Non-Bilious?

  • Obstruction is proximal to duodenum → bile cannot enter vomitus.
hypertrophic pyloric stenosis

Electrolyte Abnormality (Very Important)

Due to repeated vomiting:

  • Hypochloremic
  • Hypokalemic
  • Metabolic alkalosis

Mnemonic:

“Vomiting loses HCl”


Diagnosis

Investigation of Choice

  • Ultrasound abdomen

USG Findings

  • Thickened pylorus
  • Elongated pyloric canal
USG pyloric stenosis

X-ray/Barium

  • “String sign” (narrowed pyloric canal)
barium study vs USG in hypertrophic pyloris stenosis

Management

Initial

  • Correct:
    • Dehydration
    • Electrolyte imbalance

Definitive Treatment

  • Ramstedt pyloromyotomy
pyloromyotomy

Important Differentials

  • Gastroesophageal reflux
  • Duodenal atresia (bilious vomiting)
  • Intestinal obstruction
  • Sepsis/metabolic disorders
duodenal atresia

Super High-Yield One-Liners

  • Projectile non-bilious vomiting in a 3-week-old male = HPS until proven otherwise
  • Olive mass + visible peristalsis = classic clue
  • Best diagnostic test = Ultrasound
  • Treatment = Pyloromyotomy
  • Metabolic alkalosis is the classic acid-base disorder
barium study of duodenal atresia

Quick Revision Table

FeatureHPS
Age2–8 weeks
VomitingProjectile, non-bilious
AppetiteHungry after vomiting
MassOlive-shaped
DiagnosisUltrasound
ElectrolytesHypochloremic hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis
TreatmentRamstedt pyloromyotomy

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