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Pediatrician by Tio Manolo

Tuesday, April 7, 2026 Edition XXXVII
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This Week in Pediatrics

Q1 2026 recap: Top videos in pediatric care | Contemporary Pediatrics

The SMART trial serves as a pivotal study to bridge efficacy data from healthy infants, established in the CLEVER trial, to those with complex medical needs. Because clesrovimab is designed to target the viral F protein without interacting with the host, clinical protection is de...

Pediatrics - Medscape

Your one-stop resource for medical news, clinical reference, and education. Sign up for FREE ... The ‘Peanut Panic’ was a self-fulfilling prophecy. Dr Christopher Labos discusses the pediatric food allergy epidemic and how we’re finally reversing the trend.

UC Davis Pediatric Mobile Clinic brings specialty care to children and families across Sacramento region

With early success and strong community demand, UC Davis Health plans to continue expanding the Pediatric Mobile Clinic model, bridging health care, education and community to support the health of children and families. “Our findings show mobile clinics can close longstanding ga...

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Research of the Day

Iron Deficiency in Infancy and Long-Term Cognitive Outcomes: 10-Year Follow-Up

This prospective cohort followed children with iron deficiency anemia in infancy through age 10, comparing cognitive outcomes to iron-sufficient peers. Despite iron repletion in infancy, children with early anemia showed persistent differences in executive function and spatial memory.

Key findings: (1) Early iron deficiency associated with lower scores on math and reading assessments; (2) Differences in brain structure observed on MRI at age 10; (3) Duration of deficiency correlated with magnitude of effect.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Emphasize prevention through dietary counseling and appropriate screening. Iron-rich complementary foods should be introduced at 6 months. Consider iron supplementation in high-risk populations.

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Popular Beliefs

Letting babies walk early causes bowlegs

What the evidence shows: There is no evidence that early walking causes bowlegs. Most infants have some degree of bowing that typically resolves by age 3-4. Pathologic bowing has other causes (Blount disease, rickets). Encourage normal motor development and monitor for asymmetric or progressive bowing.

The flu shot can give you the flu

What the evidence shows: Flu vaccines contain inactivated virus or viral proteins that cannot cause influenza infection. Some people experience mild side effects (sore arm, low-grade fever) that mimic illness. It takes 2 weeks for protection to develop, so some may get infected before the vaccine works.

Chocolate causes acne

What the evidence shows: The relationship between diet and acne is complex. Some studies suggest high-glycemic diets and dairy may worsen acne, but chocolate specifically has not been definitively proven to cause breakouts. Individual responses vary—advise patients to observe their own triggers.

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Behaviors

Musical Training and Brain Development in Children: Longitudinal Neuroimaging Study

This 3-year study compared brain development in children receiving musical instrument training versus those doing sports or no organized activity. Music training was associated with enhanced auditory processing, motor coordination, and executive function networks.

Key findings: (1) Increased cortical thickness in auditory and motor regions; (2) Better performance on working memory and attention tasks; (3) Benefits correlated with practice duration.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Music education offers cognitive benefits beyond artistic development. When families ask about extracurriculars, mention music as a brain-healthy option. Benefits appear even with modest practice time.

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Genetics

Genetic Risk Screening for Type 1 Diabetes: Prevention Trial Update

Large-scale genetic screening of newborns identifies high-risk children for T1D prevention trials. Early results suggest immune modulation in high-risk children may delay or prevent onset of diabetes.

Key findings: (1) 5% of screened infants fall into high-risk category; (2) Early intervention delayed onset by average 3 years; (3) Screening acceptable to most families when explained appropriately.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

T1D prevention is moving from research to clinical reality. Stay updated on trial availability. For families with T1D history, genetic counseling and risk assessment may be appropriate for siblings.

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Did You Know? Numbers & Statistics

10%
High school students reporting current e-cigarette use
CDC YRBS, 2024
8%
Children with food allergies
CDC NCHS, 2024
56%
Infants breastfed at 6 months
CDC Breastfeeding Report Card, 2024
57%
Children 6mo-17y vaccinated against influenza
CDC, 2024