A 54-day-old girl was admitted to the hospital because of recurrent respiratory distress and failure to gain weight.She had been born to a 38-year-old woman (gravida 2, para 0) who had group B, Rh-positive blood. The mother was immune to rubella and had a negative serologic test for syphilis. Because her obstetrician had concluded that her vaginal mucus was lethal to her husband's sperm, he had administered clomiphene and inserted sperm directly into the uterus. Conception occurred on the fourth attempt. The pregnancy was complicated by the mother's smoking (less than one pack of cigarettes per day) and by a maternal respiratory tract infection that was treated with erythromycin several weeks before delivery. Ultrasonographic examinations showed delayed fetal growth.The infant was born at 35 1 ⁄ 2 weeks' gestation by urgent cesarean section, performed after meconium had been detected on amniocentesis and the fetal heart rate had decreased. Apgar scores were 7 at one minute and 8 at five minutes; no resuscitation was required. The birth weight was 1520 g. The placenta was small and contained a small, healed infarct. The infant's condition was stable during and after the brief administration of supplemental oxygen. Tests for cytomegalovirus and toxoplasma infection were negative. Hematologic laboratory values determined at 1, 13, 26, 44, 47, and 55 days are shown in Table 1. At four days of age, the infant was transferred elsewhere for feeding and growth. At eight days, a diaper rash developed and did not respond to multiple measures. Alternatives to cow's milk were tried without benefit. No thrush was found.On the 26th day of life, tachypnea with intercostal retractions developed. A radiograph (Fig. 1) showed pulmonary hyperinflation with bilateral streaky opacities in a parahilar, peribronchial distribution. The heart was normal, and the superior mediastinum was narrow. There was a bone-within-bone appearance of the vertebral bodies, and the anterior margins of the ribs were flared. Specimens were obtained for culture, and ampicillin and gentamicin were administered. Four days later, a radiograph showed findings in the right upper lobe that were consistent with the presence of atelectasis (Fig. 2). A blood culture yielded coagulase-negative staphylococci. The