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Failure to grow: lack of food or lack of love?

Abstract
One of the most important criteria for good health in childhood is normal growth. Taking regular accurate measurements of length and plotting them on a centile chart is essential to spot early signs of growth disorders. Be alert for a "zig-zag" pattern on the chart: it could indicate psychosocial dwarfism (see opposite). Length is more important than weight for identifying growth disorders. Lack of love, or an adverse emotional or social environment, can cause growth failure even in a child who is eating enough. Such children have a condition called psychosocial dwarfism, which is due to hypopituitarism (too little growth hormone secretion from the pituitary gland). This condition does not respond to growth hormone treatment. Once the child is placed in an alternative environment, eg a good foster home, the hypopituitarism is reversed and rapid "catch-up" growth takes place. It often emerges that such children have been physically, emotionally or sexually abused.
AuthorsR Stanhope, Z Wilks, G Hamill
JournalProfessional care of mother and child (Prof Care Mother Child) 1994 Nov-Dec Vol. 4 Issue 8 Pg. 234-7 ISSN: 0964-4156 [Print] England
PMID8680203 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Topics
  • Child
  • Child Nutrition Disorders (complications)
  • Child, Preschool
  • Failure to Thrive (diagnosis, etiology, psychology)
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Love
  • Male
  • Mass Screening

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