Clinical spectrum of zinc deficiency in pediatric patients receiving total parenteral nutrition (TPN)

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In a 1-yr period, 11 infants and chilren were found to have symptomatic zinc deficiency associated with prolonged total parenteral nutrition (TPN). A wide variety of signs and symptoms were due to zinc deficiency, including diarrhea, anorexia, poor weight gain, perioral and perineal rash, and alopecia. A previously undescribed symptom of zinc deficiency, that of prolonged postoperative adynamic ileus, was also seen in four children. Prompt resolution of symptomas occurred with the institution of intravenous zinc sulfate (500 μg/kg/day).

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Presented before the 29th Annual Meeting of the Surgical Section of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Detroit, Michigan, October 27–28, 1980

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From the Section of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine and the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Ind.

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