## Correct Answer: A. During feeding In congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (CHPS), the pyloric muscle undergoes progressive hypertrophy and hyperplasia, causing gastric outlet obstruction. The classic clinical sign is the **"olive"**—a palpable, firm, mobile mass representing the hypertrophied pylorus. However, the timing of visibility is critical: the mass is best visualized and palpated **during active feeding or shortly after the infant begins to feed**. This is because active gastric peristalsis during feeding causes the stomach to contract forcefully against the obstructed pylorus, making the hypertrophied muscle more prominent and easier to detect on examination. The peristaltic waves push the pyloric mass anteriorly and medially, rendering it more accessible to palpation in the epigastrium. Between feeds, the stomach is relatively empty and relaxed, and the pyloric mass may not be as readily palpable. This timing principle is fundamental to the clinical diagnosis of CHPS in Indian pediatric practice, where early recognition prevents complications like severe dehydration and electrolyte imbalance. The mass is located in the epigastrium (right of midline, beneath the liver edge), not the left hypochondrium, and while it may be palpable during careful examination, the optimal window is during or immediately after feeding when gastric activity is maximal. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. During palpation, over the epigastrium** — While the pyloric olive IS located in the epigastrium (right of midline), this option is incomplete and misleading. The location alone does not guarantee palpability—the **timing** (during feeding) is what makes the mass detectable. Palpating the epigastrium between feeds, when the stomach is empty and relaxed, will often yield a negative examination. This is a classic NBE trap: stating a correct anatomical location but omitting the critical temporal factor that determines clinical detectability. **C. Soon after birth** — CHPS typically presents between **2–8 weeks of age**, with peak incidence at 3–5 weeks. The condition is rare at birth because the pyloric hypertrophy develops *progressively* after birth; the muscle is normal at delivery. Infants born with CHPS do not show clinical signs immediately. This option confuses the *timing of presentation* with the *timing of examination*—a common trap for students who conflate disease onset with diagnostic opportunity. **D. During palpation, over the left hypochondrium** — The pyloric olive is located in the **right epigastrium** (beneath the liver edge, to the right of midline), not the left hypochondrium. The stomach fundus and greater curvature lie on the left, but the pylorus (the site of hypertrophy) is on the right. This option represents anatomical misplacement and is a straightforward distractor. Palpating the left hypochondrium would miss the lesion entirely. ## High-Yield Facts - **Pyloric olive** is best palpated **during active feeding** when gastric peristalsis is maximal and the hypertrophied muscle is most prominent. - **Peak age of presentation**: 3–5 weeks; rare at birth because pyloric hypertrophy develops *after* birth. - **Location of olive**: right epigastrium (beneath liver edge), not left hypochondrium; palpable as a firm, mobile, olive-sized mass. - **Classic presentation**: projectile vomiting (non-bilious), visible peristaltic waves, and weight loss due to gastric outlet obstruction. - **Diagnosis**: clinical palpation (olive sign) is gold standard in Indian pediatric practice; ultrasound (pyloric muscle thickness >3 mm, channel length >14 mm) confirms if olive not felt. - **Male predominance**: 4:1 male-to-female ratio; more common in firstborn infants. ## Mnemonics **OLIVE sign timing** **O**bstruction best felt **L**uring **I**nfant to **V**omit (during **E**ating). The pyloric mass is most prominent when the stomach is actively contracting against the obstruction. **CHPS age rule** **2–8 weeks** is the classic presentation window (peak 3–5 weeks). Remember: **Not at birth** (hypertrophy develops after), **not in older infants** (rare after 12 weeks). ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the correct anatomical location (epigastrium) with the wrong temporal context (palpation alone, without feeding) to trap students who know anatomy but miss the critical dynamic factor that makes the sign clinically detectable. The question tests whether students understand that physical signs in pediatric surgery depend on *timing* and *physiological state*, not just location. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric practice, a negative palpation for the pyloric olive does not rule out CHPS—always examine the infant during or within 15 minutes of feeding. Many missed diagnoses occur when the examination is performed between feeds. If the olive remains impalpable despite proper timing, ultrasound confirmation is the next step before surgical intervention (pyloromyotomy). _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 65 (Pediatric Surgery); OP Ghai Ch. 12 (Gastrointestinal Disorders in Infancy)_
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