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She is always asking for food.Already todaysince 7a.m. she has had A bowl of Frit loops cereal, with 2% milk, a Peanut Butter sandwich, 3 Slices of Bacon, a Glass of Tea, a Glass of water,a Baggyof Cereal,and is still crying she is hungry. The Doctors tell me she is fine She eats all day long But is Skin and Bones. Even a size 3 pants fall off her. Her wrists are maybe the size of a 50 cent piece. She is very active But most things she says are very hard to understand. Her mother smoked when she was pregnant. But she done the same with the youngest child and she is 3 and weighs 34 pounds and is a chunk of lead. This child I am worried about is 5 and may weigh 30 or 31 pounds. She is 42 inches tall and is so skinny she looks like skin and bones But the doctors tell us She is Fine Not to Worry BE Glad she isn't FAT. Or Obese. But I know it isn't normal for her to want to eat all the time she can go from the table and be back in 5 Minutes hungry again and eat more and does this all day.

2007-10-16 05:01:21 · 4 answers · asked by bjwill72961 2 in Health Diet & Fitness

4 answers

Does your grand-daughter have any visible bone deformities, like around her rib cage or knees?? The reason I ask is my brother had RICKETS as a child,and we found out it was partially due to an inability to absorb Vitamin D or the lack of it. Here's an article on it from www.wisegeek.com:

"Rickets, a disease that affects the developing skeletal system of children and other young animals, is the result of the body's inability to absorb calcium and phosphate. The disease is characterized by soft, weak and deformed bones. Rickets also occurs in adults, but it is then called osteomalacia because the affected bones are already formed. In adults, osteomalacia causes the bones of the skeletal system to become weak and soft.

Rickets is usually the result of a Vitamin D deficiency. Vitamin D is consumed through a proper diet and produced by the body with adequate exposure to sunlight. This vitamin is very important to the body because it helps aid in the absorption of calcium and phosphate, the minerals responsible for the strength and hardness of the bones.

Malnutrition is a major cause of rickets which can develop at any time during life, including while a baby is still in the womb. A perpetual lack of sunlight can also cause rickets. One form of rickets, called vitamin D resistant rickets, is a hereditary disease that involves the kidneys' inability to retain proper phosphate levels in the body. Chronic kidney failure that is not inherited may also be an underlying cause of rickets. Other underlying diseases or problems with the bowels can result in rickets in both adults and children.

A person with rickets may have severely bowed legs, deformation of the spine, chest and pelvis, bones that break easily and severely stunted growth. In severe cases, the knees bulge or appear very large, and there may also be other visible bone deformations characterized by posture and gait.

Rickets is diagnosed by performing blood tests to measure calcium and phosphate levels, and by using x-rays to visually asses the bone condition. A person's dietary and lifestyle history is also assessed. For example, a person who is confined to their home is more likely to develop rickets. This history can help gauge risk factors and rule out other underlying causes.

When rickets is caused by malnutrition or lack of sunlight, it can be treated with vitamin D supplements and sun exposure. Rickets caused by underlying diseases can be corrected by treating the primary disease. Bone deformities in young children often correct themselves depending on their severity. Children and adults can also wear braces and maintain proper posture to counteract bowed legs and spinal complications. In severe cases, surgery may be the only way to correct deformities.

Rickets is not as common in the United States as it is in other countries that have limited food supplies or diets with little variety. However, it is still important to maintain a diet rich in vitamin D. Foods like vitamin fortified milk and cereals, fish and liver are rich in vitamin D. "

You might also take her to a doctor outside Arkansas, and ask about a tapeworm.

2007-10-16 07:09:44 · answer #1 · answered by jan51601 7 · 0 0

My 4 year. previous daughter does the very comparable element. She is likewise consistently desiring a drink. It ok may well be boredom via fact I generally placed her off for a at the same time as and she or he forgets approximately it at situations. different situations, while she is continual I supply her a small snack or make her eat a meal. it may additionally be that a toddler's abdomen is basically the dimensions of their fist, so think of how long that little volume of foodstuff will final. additionally, feeding her while she's hungry isn't making her fat by utilising any skill. My daughter is a bean pole weighing in common terms 37 lbs. and status taller than maximum teenagers her age. maximum teenagers will end ingesting while they're finished and could no longer eat while they do no longer seem to be hungry. you could determine with your loved ones everyday practitioner to be certain, yet i'm particular you have no longer have been given something to tension approximately.

2016-10-07 01:00:23 · answer #2 · answered by palomares 4 · 0 0

Toddlers eat the way our ancestors used to eat... about 6 to 7 small meals a day and beg for more, especially when they are about to do a growth spirt. As far as I can see, what you are feeding her is not food.

Bacon is full of nitrates and can cause harm to the human brain. Fruit loops are junk food. Peanut Butter, if it is processed is hydrogenated oils, which eventually cause heart disease.

I feed my children whole grain flax cereal which are full of fatty acids, which take the bad fat out of the body and reverse heart disease. No dairy, because its full of hormones and sugar and use organic soy.

No tea, as it is a diuretic and makes one extremely thirsty and thirst is often times confused with hunger. In fact, one of the first signs of dehydration is hunger. WATER, plain water so that she can metabolize toxins out of her body and in with the good.

Give her fresh sliced turkey or chicken, sliced whole fresh fruit.. because the folic acid helps her cells divide for good organs and skin. Sliced carrots and veggies for healthy vision and healthy gums.

Fresh citrus, like sliced oranges to obtain calcium and vitamin C to prevent colds and flus. Eggs with it to metabolize the calcium and protein in the egg. Its called proper food combining.

No junk food! I wouldn't feed my kid bacon, fruit loops, tea and more cereal or my kid would be starving to death! No wonder why she is skin and bones!

Where's the fresh sliced fruit? Where's the sliced turkey? Where's the whole grain toast? Where's the organic peanut butter?

If you feed her more whole foods, more protein and less useless starch, like sugary junk cereals that contain empty calories... She will be satiated.

2007-10-16 05:09:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

she is absolutely NOT fine.
was she an immature infant?
does she show signs of attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder?
have you done some blood tests for her to detect probable parasites?
are her playing activities, physical activities, speaking skills
and mental abilities like any other child in her age?
does she take any particular medicine?
smoking in pregnancy, eating too much for her age, being underweight, unclear speaking, being overly active, and all the other things you said , made me worry as a professional .
i promise she has some problems,
doctors sometimes consider such symptoms normal, BUT NOT FOR THEIR OWN CHILDREN!
as a professional mother , i insist you to take her to a child psychologist, and a pediatrician, and an occupational therapist, and a child neurologist, and a child spychiatrist, and a speech therapist,
OR
wait untill she is 7 in primary school with lots of problems in school, ....

2007-10-16 05:27:47 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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