Health condition · plain-language reference
Rickets
Also called: Rachitis
Rickets causes soft, weak bones in children. It usually occurs when they do not get enough vitamin D , which helps growing bones absorb the minerals calcium and phosphorous. It can also happen when calcium or phosphorus levels are too low. Your child might not get enough vitamin D if he or she: Has dark skin Spends too little time outside Has on sunscreen all the time when out of doors Doesn't eat foods containing vitamin D because of lactose intolerance or a strict vegetarian diet Is breastfed without receiving vitamin D supplements Can't make or use vitamin D because of a medical disorder such as celiac disease In addition to dietary rickets, children can get an inherited form of the disease. Symptoms include bone pain or tenderness, impaired growth, and deformities of the bones and teeth. Your child's doctor uses lab and imaging tests to make the diagnosis. Treatment is replacing the calcium, phosphorus, or vitamin D that are lacking in the diet. Rickets is rare in the United States.
Plain-language summary from MedlinePlus (NIH/NLM) ↗. For informational purposes only — not medical advice.
Medications used for rickets
Drugs whose FDA labeling names this condition among its indications — informational, not a recommendation.
- PrednisoneCorticosteroid [EPC]›
- CalcitriolVitamin D3 Analog [EPC]›
- Calcium Chloride›
- Calcium Gluconate›
- Cinacalcet›
- ErgocalciferolProvitamin D2 Compound [EPC]›
- Magnesium Sulfate›
- Magnesium Sulfate Heptahydrate›
- PenicillamineAntirheumatic Agent [EPC]›
- Potassium Phosphate›
- Salmon CalcitoninCalcitonin [EPC]›
- Trientine›
- Multiple Vitamins Injection›
- 50% Magnesium Sulfate›
- Asfotase AlfaTissue-nonspecific Alkaline Phosphatase [EPC]›
- Betamethasone Sodium Phosphate, Betamethasone Acetate, Lidocaine, Iodixanol, Povidine Iodine›
- Burosumab›
- Lumasiran›
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