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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vegan diet in lactating women can induce
vitamin B12 deficiency
for their children with risk of an impaired neurological development. A 9.5-month-old girl presented with impaired growth and severe
hypotonia
. She had a macrocytic anemia secondary to
vitamin B12 deficiency
. MRI showed cerebral atrophy. She was exclusively breastfed. Her mother was also vitamin B12 deficient, secondary to a vegan diet. She had a macrocytic anemia when discharged from the maternity. Vegan diet is a totally inadequate regimen for pregnant and lactating women, especially for their children. Prevention is based on screening, information and vitamin supplementation.
...
PMID:[Breastfeeding and vegan diet]. 1620 6
Vitamin B12 deficiency
can cause serious developmental regression,
hypotonia
and cerebral atrophy in infants. We report a 6-month-old infant, with insidious developmental regression and brain atrophy showed by CT scan, secondarily to
vitamin B12 deficiency
. His mother was a strict vegetarian and the patient was exclusively breastfed. The clinical symptoms and the brain CT were normalized after vitamin B12 administration.
...
PMID:Vitamin B12 deficiency in infancy as a cause of developmental regression. 1631 May 94
A 1-year-old boy with weight loss, decreased activity, and psychomotor regression is presented. He was subjected to an extremely detailed evaluation, including electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), until a simple hemogram in our center revealed that he had macrocytic anemia with megaloblastic changes in the bone marrow. His history revealed that he had been exclusively breast-fed by his vegetarian mother. Further investigations showed low serum vitamin B12 concentration, methylmalonic aciduria, and homocysteinemia, indicating that the macrocytic anemia was due to
vitamin B12 deficiency
. This boy represents a case of macrocytic anemia and
hypotonia
owing to
vitamin B12 deficiency
that developed because of exclusive breast-feeding by a vegetarian mother.
...
PMID:Answer to hypotonia: a simple hemogram. 1641 68
Epileptic seizures during infancy have a wide variety of clinical presentations and the outcome differs according to the etiology. Among the benign and rare causes of infantile seizures,
Vitamin B12 deficiency
has been encountered. Common symptoms of
Vitamin B12 deficiency
in infants include megaloblastic anemia, feeding difficulties, developmental delay, microcephaly, failure to thrive,
hypotonia
, lethargy, irritability, involuntary movements, seizures and cerebral atrophy. Involuntary movements and seizures may rarely be the initial symptoms of
Vitamin B12 deficiency
. Involuntary movements have also been reported to appear after initiation of Vitamin B12 supplementation in isolated cases, whereas, no such information exits for seizures. In this paper, three infants with
Vitamin B12 deficiency
associated with motor and mental retardation are reported because of long-lasting focal/multifocal epileptic seizures following the initiation of intramuscular Vitamin B12 treatment. Antiepileptics were introduced in addition to Vitamin B12. Seizures disappeared within a few days or weeks; electroencephalographic findings were normalized in a few months. No relapses occurred during the follow-up period.
...
PMID:Seizures during treatment of Vitamin B12 deficiency. 1855 Mar 91
In developed countries, the
vitamin B12 deficiency
usually occurs in children exclusively breast-fed, whose mothers are vegetarians, causing low stores of vitamin B12. Symptoms of
vitamin B12 deficiency
appear during the second trimester of life and include failure to thrive, lethargy,
hypotonia
, and arrest or regression of developmental skills. A megaloblastic anemia can be present. One half of the infants exhibit abnormal movements before the start of treatment with intramuscular cobalamin, which disappear 1 or 2 days after. More rarely, movement disorders appear a few days after treatment, whereas neurological symptoms are improving. These abnormal movements can last for 2 to 6 weeks. If not treated,
vitamin B12 deficiency
can cause lasting neurodisability. Therefore, efforts should be directed to preventing deficiency in pregnant and breast-feeding women on vegan diets and their infants by giving them vitamin B12 supplements. When preventive supplementation has failed, one should recognize and treat quickly an infant presenting with failure to thrive and delayed development.
...
PMID:Neurological consequences of vitamin B12 deficiency and its treatment. 1870 98
We report herein our interesting case series of 15 infants admitting with neurological symptoms who were found to have
vitamin B12 deficiency
. Infants who were admitted to our hospital between 2004 and 2007 with neurological symptoms and were found to have
vitamin B12 deficiency
were included in this study. Data regarding clinical and laboratory features were obtained. Of 15 infants, 9 were boys (60%) and 6 were girls (40%). The mean age was 11.7 months. Anorexia, pallor,
hypotonia
, and neurodevelopmental retardation were present in all infants. Seizures and tremor were observed in 46.6% (7/15) and 33% (5/15) of patients, respectively. Seizures were generalized tonic-clonic in 4 patients, generalized tonic in 1 patient and focal in 2 patients. Four patients had tremor on admission and 1 patient had occurrence after vitamin B12 treatment.
Vitamin B12 deficiency
may lead to serious neurological deficits in addition to megaloblastic anemia. Persistent neurological damage can be prevented with early diagnosis and treatment. We believe that a thorough clinical and neurological assessment might prevent failure to notice rare but possible
vitamin B12 deficiency
in infants with neurological deficits and neurodevelopmental retardation.
...
PMID:Neurologic findings of nutritional vitamin B12 deficiency in children. 2040 62
Vitamin B12 is one of the essential vitamins affecting various systems of the body.
Vitamin B12 deficiency
in infants often produces haematological and neurological deficits including macrocyticanaemia, neurodevelopmental delay or regression, irritability, weakness,
hypotonia
, ataxia, apathy, tremor andseizures. In this article, we report the case of a six-month-old male patient diagnosed with West syndrome associated with
vitamin B12 deficiency
. Although the patient had no evidence of macrocytic anemia in complete blood count, we measured the level of vitamin B12 because the patient had hypotonicity and found it to be low. No other problem was found in the other investigations directed to the etiology of West syndrome. He was being exclusively breast-fed and
vitamin B12 deficiency
was related with nutritional inadequacy of his mother.
Vitamin B12 deficiency
should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients presenting with different neurological findings. In addition,
vitamin B12 deficiency
should be considered as a rare cause in West syndrome which has a heterogeneous etiology.
...
PMID:West syndrome due to vitamin B12 deficiency. 2688 97
Vitamin B12 deficiency
may be responsible of serious hematologic and neurodevelopmental abnormalities. We report the case of an infant who was hospitalized because of recurrent infections, failure to thrive,
hypotonia
, and weakness. He was 8 months old and had been exclusively breastfed. Blood cell count showed pancytopenia with megaloblastic bone marrow. The serum IgG concentration was low. Vitamin B12 level was very low and associated with increased urinary methylmalonic acid.
Cobalamin deficiency
was caused by mother's unrecognized pernicious anemia. Vitamin B12 supply led to rapid clinical and hematologic improvement.
...
PMID:Frequent Infections, Hypotonia, and Anemia in a Breastfed Infant. 2806 Jan 11
A
vitamin B12 deficiency
in infants is rare, but may sometimes be seen in breastfed babies of strict vegetarian mothers. Vitamin B12, also known as cobalamin, is only found in meat and other animal products. Most babies have a sufficient supply as long as the mother was not deficient herself. Symptoms and signs of
vitamin B12 deficiency
appear between the ages of 2 to 12 months and include vomiting, lethargy, failure to thrive,
hypotonia
, and arrest or regression of developmental skills. Urinary concentrations of methylmalonic acid and homocystine are characteristically elevated in
vitamin B12 deficiency
. Early treatment for a
vitamin B12 deficiency
in an infant involves immediate administration of vitamin B12 to the baby and the breastfeeding mother. The infant and mother will each receive an injection of vitamin B12 containing 1,000 mcg or more of the vitamin, and the mother will continue to receive injections every month to raise her own stores. After the initial injection, the baby will often receive future vitamin B12 through food sources. We present a case of
vitamin B12 deficiency
in a 9-month-old girl presented with psychomotor regression,
hypotonia
and lethargy. The child was exclusively breast-fed from birth by a mother who was on strict vegetarian diet and belong to a low socio-economic status. Laboratory data revealed bicytopenia with macrocytic anemia and methylmalonic acid in the urine, consistent with vitamin B12 deficient anemia. The Brain CT revealed a cerebral atrophy and delayed myelination. Vitamin B12 supply was effective on anaemia and psychomotor delay. This case figures out the importance of an early diagnosis in front of psychomoteur regression and
hypotonia
, given the risk of incomplete neurologic recovery due to
vitamin B12 deficiency
mainly in the setting of maternal nutritional deficiency.
...
PMID:Psychomotor regression due to vitamin B12 deficiency. 3037 98
Infantile Tremor Syndrome (ITS) is a self-limiting clinical state characterized by tremors, anemia, pigmentary skin disease, regression of mental development, and
hypotonia
of muscles in a plump looking child. Tremors are coarse in character, decreased or disappeared in sleep and resolves within 4-6 weeks in its natural course. Various etiological factors as infectious, metabolic, nutritional have been hypothesized but none is conclusive. Consensus is developing on the role of
Vitamin B12 deficiency
in children with ITS but is still debatable. Empirical management of ITS children has been tried in the absence of exact etiology considering child as undernourished. Nutritional management includes supplementation of Iron, Calcium, Magnesium, Vitamin B12 and other multivitamins. Tremors can be managed with administration of propranolol most commonly or phenobarbitone, phenytoin, and carbamazepine.
...
PMID:Infantile tremor syndrome: current perspectives. 3130 87
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