1. Aluminium toxicity in an infant not on dialysis;M.E.;Lancet,1983
2. Aluminium content of milk formulae and intravenous fluids used in infants;McGraw, M.; Bishop, N.; Jameson, R.;Lancet,1986
3. Infant formulae as a cause of aluminium toxicity in neonatal uraemia;Freundlich, M.; Ziliervelo, G.; Faugere, M.C.; Abitbol, C.; Strauss, J.; Malluche, H.H.;Lancet,1985
4. Evidence of aluminium loading in infants receiving intravenous therapy;Sedman, A.B.; Klein, G.L.; Merritt, R.J.;N Engl J Med,1985
5. In 1879 Gowers first described the pattern of standing in 21 boys with pseudohypertrophic muscular paralysis in a clinical lecture to the students of University College.1 He initially thought this pattern of standing was pathognomonic for children with this condition as it was present in all his ambulatory cases. It has subsequently been shown to be present in other children with proximal muscle weakness. Dr Gowers' eloquent description of the pattern of standing, which now bears his name, emphasised two important features (figure): (i) the children adopting a prone position on all fours before attempting to stand and (ii) the children 'walking up their legs'. It is the second feature that is often quoted in textbooks and remembered by physicians as Gowers'