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  Vol. 49 No. 6, June 1935 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS OF CALCIUM DEFICIENCY IN INFANCY AND IN CHILDHOOD

HAROLD T. NESBIT, M.D.

Am J Dis Child. 1935;49(6):1449-1471.

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

The clinical presentation to follow includes observations which have accumulated in my pediatric practice during the last eighteen months. The instances cited include many perplexing situations of a type one encounters in dealing with the problems of infancy and childhood.

The rather heterogeneous group of cases portray such symptoms as hypertonia, restlessness, excessive crying, retraction of the head, irregular respirations, bronchiospasm, pyloric spasm, enterospasm, convulsions and cyanotic spells occurring during infancy and often ascribed to status thymicolymphaticus or vagotonia. The cases illustrate that this syndrome may be manifested in the runabout period by continued hypertonia, sleeplessness, extreme restlessness, both mental and physical, and occasionally convulsions, occurring spontaneously or accompanying an acute illness, and in the older child by hypertonicity, together with other symptoms of increased neuromuscular irritability, emotional instability, incorrigibility and the syndrome of chorea. The frequency of emotional imbalance, excessive apprehensiveness, sleeplessness and tremor in the mothers of such . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

DALLAS, TEXAS

From the Department of Pediatrics, Baylor University.


Footnotes

Read at the meeting of the Texas Pediatric Society, in Dallas, Texas, Oct. 22, 1932.

The calcium gluconate used in these cases was supplied by the Sandoz Chemical Works, New York.



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