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  2. Rickets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rickets

    Rickets is often a result of vitamin D3 deficiency. The correlation between human skin color and latitude is thought to be the result of positive selection to varying levels of solar ultraviolet radiation. Northern latitudes have selection for lighter skin that allows UV rays to produce vitamin D from 7-dehydrocholesterol.

  3. Rickettsiosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rickettsiosis

    Diagnosis [ edit ] No rapid laboratory tests are available to diagnose rickettsial diseases early in the course of illness, and serologic assays usually take 10–12 days to become positive.

  4. Rickettsia parkeri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rickettsia_parkeri

    R. parkeri causes mild spotted fever disease in humans, whose most common signs and symptoms are fever, an eschar at the site of tick attachment, rash, headache, and muscle aches. Doxycycline is the most common drug used to reduce the symptoms associated with disease.

  5. Osteomalacia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteomalacia

    Osteomalacia in children is known as rickets, and because of this, use of the term "osteomalacia" is often restricted to the milder, adult form of the disease. Signs and symptoms can include diffuse body pains, muscle weakness, and fragility of the bones.

  6. Rickettsialpox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rickettsialpox

    Rickettsialpox is a mite-borne infectious illness caused by bacteria of the genus Rickettsia (Rickettsia akari). [1] Physician Robert Huebner and self-trained entomologist Charles Pomerantz played major roles in identifying the cause of the disease after an outbreak in 1946 in a New York City apartment complex, documented in "The Alerting of Mr. Pomerantz," an article by medical writer Berton ...

  7. Craniotabes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craniotabes

    Commonly, craniotabes results from the position of the head inside the uterus weeks prior to delivery. Calcium and Vitamin D levels should be obtained to rule out rickets, and in mothers who have prenatal labs concerning for T. pallidum infection, neonates should be evaluated for congenital syphilis. [citation needed]

  8. X-linked hypophosphatemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-linked_hypophosphatemia

    X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) is an X-linked dominant form of rickets (or osteomalacia) that differs from most cases of dietary deficiency rickets in that vitamin D supplementation does not cure it. It can cause bone deformity including short stature and genu varum (bow-leggedness).

  9. Blount's disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blount's_disease

    To differentiate between rickets and Blount's disease it is important to correlate the clinical picture with laboratory findings such as calcium, phosphorus and alkaline phosphatase. Besides the X-ray appearance. Bone deformities in rickets have a reasonable likelihood to correct over time, while this is not the case with Blount's disease.