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  Vol. 141 No. 3, March 1987 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Prolonged Breast-feeding and Nonorganic Failure to Thrive

Janet A. Weston, MD; Alan F. Stage, MD, MPH; Patsy Hathaway, MSW; Deborah L. Andrews, RD; Janet A. Stonington, MS, CHA; Ellen B. McCabe
Growth and Parenting Clinic University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Box C-219 4200 E Ninth Ave Denver, CO 80262

Am J Dis Child. 1987;141(3):242-243.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

Sir.—Failure to thrive is defined as failure of somatic growth with height and/or weight below the third percentile of standard growth charts, weight for height below the fifth percentile, or deceleration of growth velocity leading to a fall of two major percentiles of weight or height. When a patient does not have an organic disorder that explains the growth failure, the patient is diagnosed as having nonorganic failure to thrive (NOFTT). The typical psychosocial and nutritional pattern reported in NOFTT patients includes evidence of chaotic family life, emotional deprivation, and inadequate nutrition. We describe a group of four patients who did not fit the usual NOFTT profile.

Patients and Methods.—Four children (age range, 13 to 19 months) were referred to the University of Colorado Growth and Parenting Clinic, Denver, because of poor eating and growth. All four children were from middle-class families in which the father was living in . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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