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friendly_iconoclast

(15,333 posts)
Fri Sep 13, 2013, 10:38 PM Sep 2013

A 3-Year-Old Girl with Eye Pain (Child endangerment via nutrition woo)

http://www.healio.com/pediatrics/journals/pedann/%7Bb09dbfc1-b28f-4701-b42c-527bb369f62b%7D/a-3-year-old-girl-with-eye-pain

A 3-Year-Old Girl with Eye Pain


A 3-year-old girl presents with bilateral eye pain. The history of the complaint began 3 weeks earlier with headache, photophobia, and intermittent eye pain. During this time, no erythema or discharge from the eyes is noted and no other symptoms reported.

Her medical history is positive for multiple parental-diagnosed allergies and chemical sensitivities, resulting in behavioral problems, frequent loose stools, and abdominal pain. Her parents express concern that she may have gastroesophogeal reflux disease and irritable bowel syndrome...

...A detailed review of the patient’s dietary history reveals a severely restricted diet that is limited to chickpea milk, bison meat, and salicylate-free vegetables. The patient’s 10-year-old sister was placed on a similar diet at age 1 year that resulted in scurvy and rickets by age 3 years. These findings are suspicious for possible vitamin-A deficiency, and the patient is admitted to the hospital for further evaluation and treatment. The patient’s severely restricted diet has resulted in micronutrient malnutrition. Laboratory results show hemoglobin of 7.5 g/dL, iron of 35 mcg/dL, transferrin saturation of 12%, prealbumin of 6 mg/dL, and vitamins A and C below assay limits. The patient exhibits profound oral aversion as well as behavioral difficulties as a result of her long-standing dietary restrictions, which proved very problematic as an appropriate diet was reintroduced.

Diagnosis:

Vitamin-A Deficiency

This previously healthy, unimmunized child has severe vitamin-A deficiency with xerophthalmia, corneal ulcerations, follicular hyperkeratosis, scurvy, anemia, and malnutrition. During the hospitalization, the parents requested strict adherence to a “chemical-free” environment and avoidance of medications with preservatives and artificial coloring. However, upon further investigation, the mother, a health care provider, was unable to provide any supporting evidence for the chemical sensitivities; in fact, the patient was previously seen by more than a dozen providers without substantiation of these diagnoses. Against the parents’ wishes, vitamin-A supplementation was provided to correct the deficiency and decrease her risk of serious infections from damaged skin, mucous membrane barriers, and decreased cellular immunity. Immunizations were provided, particularly the measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine, because of the significant mortality risk associated with serious measles infection and vitamin-A deficiency. After restricting parental visits, the patient’s behavior gradually began to normalize, and she was ultimately discharged to the custody of child protective services.


7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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A 3-Year-Old Girl with Eye Pain (Child endangerment via nutrition woo) (Original Post) friendly_iconoclast Sep 2013 OP
I've seen shit like this go on Warpy Sep 2013 #1
One of the many skepticscott Sep 2013 #2
This message was self-deleted by its author AlecBGreen Oct 2013 #7
That is so sad LeftishBrit Sep 2013 #3
How do you not see that corneal plaque in your kid?!?! NickB79 Sep 2013 #4
Chickpea milk, bison meat, and salicylate-free vegetables? Codeine Sep 2013 #5
One absolute basis for good nutrition is to eat a wide variety of foods. SheilaT Sep 2013 #6

Warpy

(111,140 posts)
1. I've seen shit like this go on
Fri Sep 13, 2013, 11:05 PM
Sep 2013

and you just can't get through to rock headed, woo addled parents that coincidence is NOT causation and that they'd better get the kid to an allergist to find out of any of those allergies are real or they're going to end up in the pokey for starving the kid.

The only thing that works is taking the kids away. Sometimes they can be returned. Sometimes they can't.

 

skepticscott

(13,029 posts)
2. One of the many
Sat Sep 14, 2013, 09:28 AM
Sep 2013

DISadvantages of the Internet is that it reinforces this kind of dangerous woo woo, and convinces addled people that they aren't really nuts, by exposing them to all sorts of people who believe the same nonsense.

Response to skepticscott (Reply #2)

LeftishBrit

(41,203 posts)
3. That is so sad
Sat Sep 14, 2013, 02:11 PM
Sep 2013

As I've often said, adults should have the right to risk their own lives in the cause of crazy beliefs; but not to risk children's lives.

NickB79

(19,224 posts)
4. How do you not see that corneal plaque in your kid?!?!
Sat Sep 14, 2013, 05:00 PM
Sep 2013

Do you not fucking look at them, like, ever?



My kid gets a tiny mosquito bite behind her ear, I still find it under all her hair.

Really, WTF?

 

Codeine

(25,586 posts)
5. Chickpea milk, bison meat, and salicylate-free vegetables?
Tue Sep 24, 2013, 07:30 PM
Sep 2013

What kind of whackadoodle bullshit is that? I'm a fucking vegan and that is even too weird for me. Chickpea milk? O_o

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
6. One absolute basis for good nutrition is to eat a wide variety of foods.
Wed Sep 25, 2013, 02:00 PM
Sep 2013

Opinions vary about whether or not meat or dairy or some other things ought to be included, but it's the wide variety that's so crucial.

What's truly sad is that the parents made absolutely no connection between their weird dietary beliefs and the child's condition.

I also what kind of health care provider the mother actually is.

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