• Nutrition · Jul 2020

    Case Reports

    Infantile scurvy: Still a relevant differential diagnosis in Western medicine.

    • Desirée Schwetje, Anne Zillekens, Jan-Dirk Kieback, Sebastian Koob, and Richard Placzek.
    • University Hospital Bonn, Department of Orthopedics and traumatology, Bonn, Germany. Electronic address: desiree.schwetje@ukbonn.de.
    • Nutrition. 2020 Jul 1; 75-76: 110726.

    ObjectiveInfantile scurvy or Moller-Barlow's disease appears to be of no further importance in Western countries; however, this is a careless assumption. In severely disabled children especially, this malady manifests itself in a broad range of symptoms such as delayed or suppressed bone healing, minor traumatization leading to bruises or fractures, and epiphysiolysis.MethodsThe aim of this article was to present the required daily uptake of vitamin C and the biochemical pathways in the human body leading to the typical symptoms of scurvy. Two cases of chronic scurvy with prolonged bone healing and bleeding, epiphysiolysis, and gingival hyperplasia are presented. Both patients were chronically ill with one having cerebral palsy and the other a neuroblastoma of the adrenal gland.ResultsAfter diagnosis, the substitution of vitamin C via percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy in both patients was necessary to treat them. Both patients quickly achieved a full recovery.ConclusionThe two patients presented show the importance of infantile scurvy in daily medical care. The prevalence of scurvy is often underestimated in severely disabled or chronically ill children.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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