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Old 12-04-2004, 09:14 PM
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Retarded child with vitamin/mineral deficiency

A Southeast Asian immigrant child is noted to be severely retarded. Physical examination reveals a pot-bellied, pale child with a puffy face. The child's tongue is enlarged. Dietary deficiency of which of the following substances can produce this pattern?

A. Calcium
B. Iodine
C. Iron
D. Magnesium
E. Selenium
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Old 12-05-2004, 07:14 PM
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Old 12-06-2004, 10:18 PM
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Re: Retarded child with vitamin/mineral deficiency

Quote:
Originally Posted by BioPatel
A Southeast Asian immigrant child is noted to be severely retarded. Physical examination reveals a pot-bellied, pale child with a puffy face. The child's tongue is enlarged. Dietary deficiency of which of the following substances can produce this pattern?

A. Calcium
B. Iodine
C. Iron
D. Magnesium
E. Selenium
The correct answer is B. The disease is cretinism, characterized by a profound lack of thyroid hormone in a developing child, leading to mental retardation and the physical findings described in the question stem. Cretinism can be due to dietary deficiency of iodine (now rare in this country because of iodized salt), to developmental failure of thyroid formation, or to a defect in thyroxine synthesis.
Calcium deficiency (choice A) in children can cause osteoporosis or osteopenia.

Iron deficiency (choice C) can cause a hypochromic, microcytic anemia.

Magnesium deficiency (choice D) is uncommon, but can cause decreased reflexes, and blunts the parathyroid response to hypocalcemia.

Selenium deficiency (choice E) is rare, but may cause a reversible form of cardiomyopathy.
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