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A thank you from the Editor-in-Chief, years later, to her fellow residents, who helped her with scheduling and on call when she was pregnant and about to have her child.

A 2-week-old infant was assessed for an abnormal penis with a dorsal hood and a meatus that extended to the corona. Both testes were palpable in the scrotum. No chordee was apparent. Hypospadias occurs in 1 in 250 male newborns.1 In neonates with this congenital anomaly, the urethral meatus is ectopically positioned to open proximal to the normal site and on the ventral aspect of the penis or, in severe cases, on the scrotum or perineum. The prepuce is incompletely developed over the glans and presents as a hood. Some cases are associated with a chordee, which causes a ventral curvature of the penis with erection.

ABSTRACT: Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis (CRMO) is an inflammatory bone disease that occurs primarily in childhood. The clinical picture often is confused with bacterial osteomyelitis. Awareness of CRMO as a clinical entity helps avoid diagnosis and treatment delays. Our patient, an 8-year-old girl, presented with acute left hip pain. One month after presentation, a lytic lesion was seen on plain radiographs; biopsy revealed nonspecific inflammation. It was not until more than 2 years later, when multifocal bone lesions and psoriasis developed, that the diagnosis became clear. Our patient's case demonstrates several key points: not all children with CRMO present with multifocal disease, patients frequently have comorbid inflammatory conditions, and there are no diagnostic laboratory studies. The optimal treatments remain unknown.

The sharply demarcated, smooth red plaques on this 3-year-old's tongue had been present for several months. The child initially refused to stick out his tongue. He cooperated after he was offered a lollipop (with the stipulation that "the wider he opened his mouth, the bigger the lollipop he would receive").

The parents of a 7-month-old girl brought their daughter for immediate medical attention after she passed bright green-colored stool. For the past 24 hours, the child had mild fussiness and a low-grade fever (temperature, 38.1°C [100.6°F]); she also had vomiting and mild diarrhea, with yellow-colored stools. The mother was advised to begin small, frequent feedings of oral rehydration solution with gradual return to the baby's normal diet, as tolerated. Over the next 12 hours, the vomiting and fussiness decreased and the fever resolved, but the mild diarrhea persisted and stools turned bright green. The parents denied giving the child green-colored drinks or food.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have joined forces with other public and private groups to raise the nation’s awareness of the health benefits of fruits and vegetable consumption.

FDA product recalls

Information on voluntary recalls of Dole packaged salads called Dole Hearts Delight sold in the US and Canada, and B. Braun Medical's Normal Saline Flush syringes .

With increasing rates of premature births, primary care providers face questions about how to follow the neurodevelopment of these at-risk infants and children. Here's what to expect and how to optimize outcomes.

With increasing rates of premature births, primary care providers face questions about how to follow the neurodevelopment of these at-risk infants and children. Here's what to expect and how to optimize outcomes.

Expanding office hours

Doctors are expanding office hours to meet growing competition, improve patient access, and cope with limited space.

The central umbilical cord blood dilemma is between donating a newborn's cord blood for others' use and banking it for the family's possible future therapy.

For parents or practitioners looking for advice on temper tantrums-from the common ones of the terrible twos to those of teens lashing out at their parents-the Web offers pools of advice a mile wide but only a few inches deep.

The dramatic rise in autism cases is a mystery-is there a cause? Is it preventable? Regardless, we know more about it and other developmental disorders than ever before.

Web links: Oral health info

Most every child will put a tooth under their bed pillow, and hope the Tooth Fairy exchanges it for a dollar bill (or a five, since the days of the Tooth Fairy using pocket change are long gone).

With increasing rates of premature births, primary care providers face questions about how to follow the neurodevelopment of these at-risk infants and children. Here's what to expect and how to optimize outcomes.