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THE INORGANIC PHOSPHATE CONTENT OF BREAST MILK OF MOTHERS WITH NORMAL AND WITH RACHITIC INFANTS

LUDO VON MEYSENBUG, A.B., M.D.
Am J Dis Child. 1922;24(3):200-203. doi:10.1001/archpedi.1922.04120090023004.
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The rôle of the phosphorus ion in the metabolism of rickets has recently acquired a prominence which is certain to be of the greatest moment. Clinically, we have learned form the work of Howland and Kramer1 that infantile rickets, when active, is invariably accompanied by a reduction in the serum inorganic phosphorus and, as shown by Hess and Gutman,2 this constituent of the blood rises as the rickets heals. Experimentally, the almost simultaneous and quite independent observations of Sherman and Pappenheimer3 and of McCollum and his associates4 have shown that rickets can be produced at will in the rat by a diet deficient in inorganic phosphorus, and that if this salt be added to the dietary in sufficient quantity, rickets fails to develop. However striking and conclusive these experimental observations may be, it is at once apparent that in the light of clinical experience they cannot

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