Free serum thyroxine level and basal metabolic rate. Aids to diagnosis in malnutrition and small-for-gestational-age dwarfism
I. Krieger and Q. Taqi
Measurement of the basal metabolic rate (BMR) and the total and free serum
thyroxine values in response to feeding are aids in the diagnosis of growth
failure. Infants with small-for-gestational-age dwarfism gained weight
poorly in the hospital, had a low BMR before and after spontaneous or
induced weight gain, and a normal serum thyroxine value. Infants with
linear growth failure due to chronic malnutrition had a normal BMR but a
low serum thyroxine value that rose to normal with weight gain; infants
with clinical signs of recent weight loss had a low BMR and a low serum
thyroxine value, both of which rose to normal with weight gain. Increases
of the BMR were sharp and very rapid; they preceded the rise of the serum
thyroxine value in some cases.