Results 301 to 310 of about 3,162,749 (346)

Change in Weight Status From Childhood to Young Adulthood and Risk of Adult Coronary Heart Disease.

open access: yesJAMA Pediatr
Ohlsson C   +5 more
europepmc   +1 more source
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Childhood Allergy

Southern Medical Journal, 1980
The practicing pediatrician is often expected to make informed recommendations concerning the role of dietary and environmental prophylaxis against childhood atopic diseases. These allergic conditions are commonly seen in general pediatric practice and may have a substantial adverse effect on the family.
S R, Halpern, G W, Brasher, M J, Harrod
openaire   +2 more sources

Childhood tuberculosis

Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine, 2000
Childhood tuberculosis will reflect the incidence of cavitating pulmonary tuberculosis in adults and will consequently be encountered most frequently in those areas with a high incidence of tuberculosis. Problem areas include our continuing inability to confirm the diagnosis of tuberculosis in many children, the escalating interaction of the human ...
openaire   +2 more sources

CHILDHOOD TUMORS

Surgical Clinics of North America, 2000
Pediatric solid tumors represent a distinct set of malignancies of embryonal origin whose incidence peaks in the first years of life. Specific genetic anomalies with pathogenic significance, which have helped to define the diagnosis better and to improve the prognosis of children with these tumors, recently have been discovered.
Herrera, JM   +3 more
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Childhood Porphyrias

Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2002
Childhood porphyrias are an uncommon group of metabolic disorders that result from inherited deficiencies of enzymes involved in the heme biosynthetic pathway. Although childhood porphyrias have been reported globally, their exact incidence is unknown. The inheritance patterns of these disorders are complex.
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Childhood prosopagnosia

Brain and Cognition, 1989
K.D. has been unable to recognize people's faces since sustaining cerebral injury in infancy. Investigation of this disorder carried out when K.D. was aged 8 to 11 years showed that although her basic visual abilities were impaired, they were no poorer than those of other children who recognized faces without difficulty. K.D.
A W, Young, H D, Ellis
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