⚕️

Pediatrician by Tio Manolo

Friday, May 29, 2026 Edition XXXXXXXXIX
Language:
📰

This Week in Pediatrics

JAMA Pediatrics – The Science of Child and Adolescent Health

Explore the latest in child health including food and nutrition, Kawasaki disease and C difficile, effects of media, and more. Formerly Archives of

Pediatrics - Medscape

For Farmers, Mental Health Care That Fits · Medscape News Canada May 27, 2026 · What Your ZIP Code Is Costing You · Medscape Medical News May 26, 2026 View All · Centers for Disease Control and Prevention · Children's Hospital of Philadelphia · Children's National Healt...

7 Allergy Headlines You Missed in January 2026 | HCPLive

FDA clears pediatric HAE oral therapy as intranasal epinephrine and heat-treated peanut/egg OIT studies point to safer allergy care. ... US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) approvals to innovative approaches in oral immunotherapy (OIT), the ...

🔬

Research of the Day

Early Antibiotic Exposure and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes: A Population-Based Cohort Study

This large population-based cohort study examined over 1.2 million children to investigate the association between antibiotic exposure in the first year of life and subsequent neurodevelopmental outcomes. The researchers found a modest but statistically significant association between early broad-spectrum antibiotic use and increased risk of ADHD and autism spectrum disorder diagnoses, though the absolute risk increase remained small.

Key findings include: (1) Children exposed to antibiotics in the first year had a 12% increased relative risk of ADHD diagnosis; (2) The association was stronger with repeated courses of broad-spectrum antibiotics; (3) The effect persisted after adjusting for maternal infections and other confounders.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

While the study shows an association, causation is not established. The findings support judicious antibiotic use in infants—prescribing when clinically indicated, but avoiding unnecessary courses.

🤔

Popular Beliefs

Starve a fever, feed a cold

What the evidence shows: Neither fevers nor colds benefit from restricting food. Both conditions increase metabolic demands, and adequate nutrition supports immune function. Encourage normal eating as tolerated and emphasize hydration with any illness.

Vaccines cause autism

What the evidence shows: This thoroughly debunked claim originated from a fraudulent 1998 study. Multiple large-scale studies involving millions of children have found no association between vaccines and autism. The original study was retracted and its author lost his medical license. Vaccines are safe and essential.

Wait 30 minutes after eating before swimming

What the evidence shows: There's no evidence that swimming after eating causes cramps or drowning. While digestion diverts some blood flow to the gut, it doesn't impair swimming ability in normal circumstances. Common-sense supervision is always important regardless of meal timing.

🧠

Behaviors

Breakfast Consumption and Cognitive Performance in School-Age Children

This crossover study compared cognitive test performance in 200 children ages 8-11 on days with and without breakfast. Skipping breakfast significantly impaired attention, memory, and problem-solving speed, with effects noticeable by mid-morning.

Key findings: (1) 18% slower response time on attention tasks without breakfast; (2) Short-term memory scores 12% lower; (3) Nutrient-dense breakfasts outperformed high-sugar options for sustained attention.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Screen for breakfast skipping during well visits, especially in lower-income families. Connect families with school breakfast programs when appropriate. Quick, balanced breakfast options can be discussed as anticipatory guidance.

🧬

Genetics

Gene Therapy for Phenylketonuria: Phase 2 Trial Results

Phase 2 trial results of a novel gene therapy for PKU show sustained reduction in phenylalanine levels, potentially eliminating the need for restrictive diet in some patients. Single-dose treatment showed effects lasting 2+ years in most participants.

Key findings: (1) 70% of participants achieved normal Phe levels without diet; (2) No serious adverse events; (3) Quality of life significantly improved with dietary liberalization.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Gene therapy is expanding beyond rare diseases to common metabolic conditions. For PKU families, inform them of emerging options while continuing to support dietary adherence.

📊

Did You Know? Numbers & Statistics

19.7%
Children and adolescents with obesity (BMI ≥95th percentile)
CDC NHANES, 2024
15K
New type 2 diabetes cases in youth under 20 annually
CDC, 2024
17 tsp
Average daily added sugar intake by children 2-19
CDC NHANES, 2024
33.4
SUID deaths per 100,000 live births
CDC, 2024