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Annals of Tropical Paediatrics
International Child Health
Volume 10, 1990 - Issue 4
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Original Articles

Familial hypophosphataemic rickets: experience with 24 children from Kuwait

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Pages 377-381 | Received 02 Feb 1990, Published online: 13 Jul 2016
 

Summary

Between 1982 and 1988, familial hypophosphataemic rickets (FHR) was diagnosed in 24 children, in nine during screening of the families of index patients. The average annual incidence was 0.2/1000 live births. There were 16 boys and 8 girls in 10 families, of which nine had more than one affected child. Their ages at the onset of the disease ranged between 10 months and 14 years (mean 6.9 yrs). Growth retardation and bowing of the legs were the most prominent features, observed in all index patients and in four of the patients diagnosed by screening. Treatment with 1 α-hydroxyvitamin D3 and phosphates was associated with acceleration of growth in all children, healing of rickets in 21, and normalization of the serum phosphate in 22. Two children with late diagnosis are now older than 16 years with a final height below the 3rd cernile. Three more pubertal children are also shorter than the 3rd cernile. In areas where nutritional rickets is common, FHR is likely to be missed and the treatment delayed with grave consequences; in particular, growth retardation and bone deformity.

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