Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 107
pro vyhledávání: '"E. Gross-Kieselstein"'
Publikováno v:
The Israel Medical Association journal : IMAJ. 2(8)
Concomitant bacterial and viral infection is a well-known phenomenon, however only very rarely has a bacterial infection been reported during hepatitis A virus infection.To evaluate retrospectively the clinical records of children hospitalized with H
Publikováno v:
Israel journal of medical sciences. 29(1)
Autor:
N, Philip, P, Meinecke, A, David, J, Dean, S, Ayme, R, Clark, E, Gross-Kieselstein, D, Hosenfeld, A, Moncla, D, Muller
Publikováno v:
Clinical dysmorphology. 1(2)
Kabuki make-up (Niikawa-Kuroki) syndrome has been described mainly in Japanese patients. In this paper we report sixteen new cases from Europe and North America, suggesting that Kabuki make-up syndrome may be more common outside of Japan than suppose
Publikováno v:
The Pediatric infectious disease journal. 10(9)
Publikováno v:
Clinical genetics. 38(5)
The Niikawa-Kuroki "Kabuki Make-Up" syndrome is a rare sporadic malformation syndrome, characterised by severe psychomotor and growth retardation, peculiar facies, including long palpabral fissures and large malformed ears and skeletal abnormalities.
Publikováno v:
Archives of Disease in Childhood. 61:194-196
Pancytopenia after intramuscular iron-dextran treatment occurred in an infant with Down's syndrome. Haematological abnormalities recurred on subsequent challenge. Positive migration inhibiting factor and mast cell degranulation tests support an aller
A male infant with multiple congenital anomalies and psychomotor retardation was found to have a translocation resulting in partial trisomy for the distal part of chromosome 3p. An older sister with similar clinical findings had an identical karyotyp
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::5bdef7b8c2e7533fe24fad9fede0e3de
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1049347/
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1049347/
Publikováno v:
Harefuah. 89(7)
Publikováno v:
Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition. 5(2)
Sulfasalazine very rarely causes bloody diarrhea. A 3-month-old infant had bloody diarrhea that could be related to sulfasalazine that had been taken by his mother and was transferred through his mother's breast milk. The patient was exclusively brea