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Alopecia Areata in 13 mo old daughter, plus failure to thrive and low iron

Doctor, My now 15 month old daughter has patchy hair loss, I'm not sure how to classify the extensiveness, but 5-6 patches, one about the size of her palm, one as small as a dime, others in between. They started falling out at 13 mo. old.  We saw a derm, not a ped specialist or board certified, who dx her w/ AA by sight only, no tests done. My ped thinks there is hope that she does not have AA, and rather it is a nutritional deficiency and transitory hair loss. She had the following labs done in March 09: TSH 3.39 uIU/ml, Free T4 .6 ng/dL, Ferratin 10 ng/mL, CBC--all normal except RDW CV 14.2% and neutrophils 1.28. In Jan 09 she had the following labs: Iron 62 ng/dL, TIBC 386 ug/dL, % saturation 16%, IgA 29 mg/dL (I have a fam hx of celiac). She was born at 6lb, 14 oz, but her weight started dropping off the weight chart around 2 mo w/ no explanation. I tried everything to get her to eat, and added extra fat to her solids starting at 6 mo to just recently, she just would not nurse or eat very much. Her percents at her Well Baby's are as follows: 2 mo 27%, 4 mo 17%, 6 mo 13%, 9 mo 8%, 12 mo 5%. Since 12 mo she has been actually gaining weight and today she is 21 lbs at the 19%. Her height has stayed constant at the 50%. Is is mostly healthy otherwise, meeting her milestones, though she tends to catch colds somewhat often. She is currently taking 30 mg elemental iron and we have her on a topical steroid for her hair (betamethasone?). My question is could my pediatrition be right, and it might not be AA, or is this a likely dx? Are there any other tests that should be done? We will be seeing a ped GI in late June to look at possible malabsoption issues, maybe celiac, and our derm may send us to a hair specialist or a ped derm if she does not respond to the steroid tx. We are working w/in a large HMO, and so far it has been difficult to get the care we think she needs. Do you have any experience w/ AA starting this young, and what could I expect? Thank you!
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242489 tn?1210497213
MEDICAL PROFESSIONAL
It sounds like alopecia areata to me.  Nutritional deficiencies don't generally cause hair loss, and when they do, the loss is diffuse rather than patchy.  Usually alopecia patches re-grow in 3-6 months.  I doubt that anything you find out about gastrointestinal issues will be relevant.  Alopecia areata is generally diagnosed clinically; the only tests that might help are skin biopsies, which don't sound necessary to me at this point.  (I don't recall seeing this condition in a small child, but it is common in children.

Best.

Dr. Rockoff
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Sorry, she also has no pitting of nails or atopy.
Helpful - 0

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