## Correct Answer: A. Metabolic alkalosis Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a devastating inflammatory bowel disease of premature neonates characterized by mucosal injury, bacterial invasion, and potential perforation. The metabolic derangement in NEC is **metabolic acidosis**, not alkalosis. This occurs due to tissue hypoxia, anaerobic metabolism, lactate accumulation, and loss of bicarbonate through diarrhea and intestinal necrosis. The acidosis reflects the severity of intestinal ischemia and systemic compromise. In contrast, vomiting (option B) causes loss of gastric acid and typically leads to metabolic alkalosis, but in NEC, the predominant acid-base disturbance is acidosis. The other features—vomiting, abdominal wall erythema, and palpable abdominal mass (from bowel wall edema or necrotic segment)—are all classic clinical manifestations of NEC. Metabolic alkalosis would suggest gastric outlet obstruction or primary loss of gastric acid, not the pathophysiology of NEC. This distinction is critical in Indian neonatal ICU practice where NEC remains a leading cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Vomiting** — Vomiting is a cardinal early sign of NEC, reflecting intestinal inflammation and ileus. Bilious vomiting indicates obstruction or bowel dysfunction. This is a true clinical feature of NEC, not an exception. NBE includes this as a distractor because students may confuse it with the metabolic consequence (alkalosis from vomiting in other conditions). **C. Erythema of the abdominal wall** — Abdominal wall erythema is a sign of advanced NEC with peritonitis or perforation, indicating transmural inflammation and bacterial translocation. This is a true and ominous clinical feature. NBE includes this to test whether students recognize progressive NEC signs beyond early symptoms. **D. Abdominal mass** — A palpable abdominal mass in NEC represents bowel wall edema, necrotic segment, or inflammatory exudate. This is a genuine clinical finding in moderate-to-severe NEC. NBE uses this to test discrimination between actual NEC features and metabolic consequences unrelated to NEC pathophysiology. ## High-Yield Facts - **Metabolic acidosis** (not alkalosis) is the acid-base disturbance in NEC due to tissue hypoxia, lactate accumulation, and bicarbonate loss. - **Bell's staging** (Stage I: suspected; Stage II: definite; Stage III: perforated) guides NEC severity assessment and management in Indian NICUs. - **Risk factors** include prematurity (<32 weeks), low birth weight, rapid feeding advancement, and formula feeding (breast milk is protective). - **Pneumatosis intestinalis** on abdominal X-ray is pathognomonic for NEC and indicates transmural disease. - **Feeding cessation, NPO status, broad-spectrum antibiotics, and supportive care** are the mainstay of NEC management; surgery reserved for perforation. ## Mnemonics **NEC Clinical Features (NOT Alkalosis)** **V**omiting, **E**rythema, **A**bdominal mass, **D**istension, **D**iarrhea, **A**cidosis (metabolic) — remember NEC causes ACIDOSIS, not alkalosis. Alkalosis occurs with gastric acid loss in other conditions, not NEC. **Bell's Staging of NEC** **Stage I (Suspected)**: feeding intolerance, abdominal distension. **Stage II (Definite)**: pneumatosis, portal venous gas. **Stage III (Advanced/Perforated)**: perforation, peritonitis, shock. Use to grade severity and guide management intensity. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs vomiting (which causes alkalosis in gastric outlet obstruction) with NEC to trap students who confuse the metabolic consequence of vomiting in isolation with the actual acid-base status of NEC. The key discriminator is that NEC causes **acidosis** due to intestinal ischemia, not alkalosis. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian NICUs, NEC remains the leading cause of neonatal mortality in preterm infants. A premature infant presenting with bilious vomiting, abdominal distension, and erythema with metabolic **acidosis** (not alkalosis) on blood gas is classic NEC—immediate NPO status, IV fluids, and broad-spectrum antibiotics (ampicillin + gentamicin + clindamycin per NICU protocols) are life-saving. Alkalosis would suggest a different diagnosis entirely. _Reference: OP Ghai Essentials of Pediatrics, Ch. Neonatology (NEC); Harrison Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 169 (Neonatal Disorders); Robbins Pathological Basis of Disease, Ch. 10 (Intestinal Pathology)_
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