Scurvy and food selectivity in childhood: a case report.
Nicole Carvalho Xavier Micheloni da SilvaPaula Fraiman Blatyta CaselliChahine Pereira MarinhoLucia Daihana Godoy LopezFernanda Menezes VasconcelosMariana Vicentin NauffKamila Caixeta GonçalvesPublished in: Einstein (Sao Paulo, Brazil) (2023)
Despite its rarity, symptomatic micronutrient deficiency remains a public health problem. Scurvy is the differential diagnosis for bleeding disorders and hematological and rheumatological diseases, especially in patients with eating disorders. However, it is unrelated to autism spectrum disorders or other neurodevelopmental disorders. A previously healthy 10-year-old boy living in São Paulo, Brazil, had a history of significant food selectivity unrelated to autism spectrum disorder, resulting in symptomatic ascorbic acid deficiency (scurvy). This resulted in pain and purpuric lesions on the lower limbs, gingival edema, bleeding during tooth brushing, asthenia, weakness, malaise, and sadness. Therefore, dietary anamnesis is important for routine monitoring of child growth and development. This process helps prevent nutritional deficiencies, facilitates early diagnosis of eating disorders, and enables multidisciplinary follow-up for these patients.
Keyphrases
- autism spectrum disorder
- public health
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- intellectual disability
- atrial fibrillation
- mental health
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- clinical practice
- neuropathic pain
- replacement therapy
- pain management
- cord blood
- spinal cord injury
- risk assessment
- spinal cord
- structural basis
- quality improvement
- patient reported
- working memory
- postoperative pain
- childhood cancer