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3.
Dev Med Child Neurol ; 24(4): 419-36, 1982 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6811354

ABSTRACT

This prospective 20-year follow-up study contrasts the development of a group of 20 children grossly undernourished during infancy (index group) with that of a matched control group. There were significant differences between two groups in head circumference, height, weight, full-scale IQ, verbal quotient, non-verbal quotient and in visuo-motor perceptual function. Despite their disadvantages, the index group have integrated effectively into the community, and their children have not experienced the nutritional deprivation they suffered during their own childhoods.


Subject(s)
Cognition Disorders/psychology , Protein-Energy Malnutrition/psychology , Social Adjustment , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Adolescent , Adult , Body Height , Body Weight , Brain/growth & development , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Infant , Intelligence , Male , Motor Skills , Personality Development , Psychological Tests , Socioeconomic Factors , Visual Perception
5.
S Afr Med J ; 58(8): 336-8, 1980 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7404249

ABSTRACT

Parents should strive for two objectives in bringing up children: that their children should be happy and brought up prepared to face and deal with adult life. Happiness requires love, which is incomplete without respect, and much respect derives from discipline. For adulthood children need to be taught self-control, have a sense of responsibility and service, and recognize that you can't go through life doing just what you like.


Subject(s)
Child Rearing , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Infant , Parent-Child Relations , Psychology, Adolescent , Psychology, Child , Punishment
6.
S Afr Med J ; 57(26): 1067, 1980 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7404095
7.
Arch Dis Child ; 51(5): 327-36, 1976 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-938077

ABSTRACT

This third 5-year follow-up on the effects of severe undernutrition during infancy on subsequent brain growth and intellectual development confirms the level of gross retardation of intellect in the undernourished group when compared with the controls. As the subjects are now 15-18 years of age this must be permanent. All but 5 of the undernourished group are now living in conditions comparable to the controls. Improved nutrition is manifest by catch-up in height, in that the mean difference between undernourished subjects and controls has decreased by 2-73 cm. Remarkably, the difference in head circumference has increased by 0-5 cm, the mean head circumference of the undernourished now being 2-8 cm less than that of the controls. The Bender Gestalt and Human Figure Drawing tests did not correlate with the intelligence tests, indicating a separate deficit of a marked disturbance of visual-motor perception in 17 of the undernourished subjects, in 9 of whom these tests were highly significant of minimal brain dysfunction (5 of the controls). In retrospect there is much evidence to suggest the controls were also suboptimal; 8 controls had abnormal electroencephalograms as did 6 of the undernourished group.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Growth , Infant Nutrition Disorders/complications , Intelligence , Adolescent , Bender-Gestalt Test , Body Weight , Brain/growth & development , Electroencephalography , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Head/anatomy & histology , Humans , Infant , Intelligence Tests , Male , Radiography , Skull/diagnostic imaging , Socioeconomic Factors
8.
S Afr Med J ; 49(3): 69-72, 1975 Jan 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1114409

ABSTRACT

Twenty-eight Black children with complicated measles were investigated for their capacity to produce antibodies when stimulated with TAB antigen. Their measles antibody titres were also measured. Antibody production to TAB was defective, especially the "H" antibody. Production of measles antibody was sometimes delayed in its appearance but subsequently reached normal levels.


Subject(s)
Antibody Formation , Measles/immunology , Antibodies, Bacterial/biosynthesis , Antibodies, Viral/biosynthesis , Body Weight , Child, Preschool , Complement Fixation Tests , Humans , Infant , Measles virus/immunology , Salmonella typhi/immunology
13.
Br Med J ; 1(5901): 223-6, 1974 Feb 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4131848

ABSTRACT

Intermittent positive-pressure ventilation and muscle relaxants were first used in Cape Town in 1958 in an attempt to reduce the mortality from tetanus neonatorum, which was then over 90%. Problems of effective ventilation, of tracheostomy, and of infection in the neonate were gradually overcome so that between 1967 and 1972 the mortality in 186 cases was 21%. In a consecutive series of 97 cases the mortality was 10%.


Subject(s)
Infant, Newborn, Diseases/therapy , Neuromuscular Nondepolarizing Agents/therapeutic use , Positive-Pressure Respiration , Tetanus/therapy , Airway Obstruction , Carbon Dioxide/analysis , Diazepam/therapeutic use , Humans , Humidity , Infant, Newborn , Methods , Oxygen/analysis , Paraldehyde/therapeutic use , Parenteral Nutrition , Partial Pressure , Saliva , Temperature , Tetanus Antitoxin/therapeutic use , Tracheotomy , Tubocurarine/therapeutic use , Weaning , gamma-Globulins/therapeutic use
15.
16.
SA Nurs J ; 39(9): 13-6, 1972 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4484844

Subject(s)
Child Rearing
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