Clerkship
    Lecture
materials and small group cases are posted here for University of Calgary
Cumming School of Medicine students. Access to these materials are password
protected.
Objectives
    By  the  end  of  the  Paediatric  Clerkship,  a  medical  student  will  be  able  to:
- Accurately  plot  and  interpret  a  growth  curve.
 
- Clinically  recognize  familial  short  stature  and  constitutional  growth  delay.
 
- Identify  a  patient  with,  and  list  a  differential  diagnosis  for,  failure  to  thrive  and  obesity.
 
- Describe  the  physiological  and  psychological  consequences  of  obesity  and  malnutrition.
 
- Recognize  that  there  are  specific  growth  charts  for  some  syndromes  with  abnormal  growth  (examples:    Turner  syndrome,  Down  syndrome).
 
Half Day Cases
    
                    - 
                A 7 year old girl presents with short stature. Her parents are concerned that she has always been the smallest in her class. In clinic today, her height is 115 cm and her weight is 20 kg. Her father’s reported height is 175 cm and her mother’s reported height is 155 cm.
            
 
                    - 
                A 12 year old boy, who is a hockey player, presents with concerns of being short and having no signs of puberty yet. His father remembers having a late growth spurt at age 16 years and is now of average height.
            
 
                    - 
                A 5 year old girl is referred for poor growth. She has been falling off the curve for both weight and height.
            
 
                    - 
                An 8 year old boy presents for a routine assessment and is noted to have gained weight since his last visit.
            
 
                    - 
                A 6 month old girl with Trisomy 21 is referred for poor growth. Height 60 cm and weight 5 kg.
            
 
                    - 
                An 8 year old girl presents with short stature and a height of 105 cm. The family reports that she has a history of multiple otitis media and learning difficulty in math.