Okay, I just did a Kaplan Qbank question like this:
What disease will make a baby cyanotic on bottom and pink on top.
Answer choices were basically between an infantile coarctation of the aorta and a PDA.
I went w/PDA because RR and Goljan said that infantile coarctation usually is w/turners syndrome and requires surgery immediately and doesnt have the differential cyanosis going on (adult has em). And on page 180 RR it clearly indicates the PDA has differntial cyanosis.
Yet at the Qbank explanation it says that PDA doesnt have differential cyanosis.
Who do I go with? It's a pretty big concept that I can def. see being tested.
What disease will make a baby cyanotic on bottom and pink on top.
Answer choices were basically between an infantile coarctation of the aorta and a PDA.
I went w/PDA because RR and Goljan said that infantile coarctation usually is w/turners syndrome and requires surgery immediately and doesnt have the differential cyanosis going on (adult has em). And on page 180 RR it clearly indicates the PDA has differntial cyanosis.
Yet at the Qbank explanation it says that PDA doesnt have differential cyanosis.
Who do I go with? It's a pretty big concept that I can def. see being tested.