hrp0089rfc13.6 | Pituitary, Neuroendocrinology and Puberty 2 | ESPE2018

Close Correlation between Salivary and Blood Steroids in Normal Boys: Salivary Testosterone Best Characterizes Male Puberty

Schwab Karl Otfried , Dickhuth Karoline , Mumm Rebekka , Stier Bernhard , Doerfer Juergen , Grueninger Dirk , Brichta Corinna Melanie , van der Werf-Grohmann Natascha , Wurm Michael , Krebs Andreas

Aims: The golden standard to characterize pubertal maturation is the analysis of steroid hormones in the blood. The aim of the investigation was to assess whether the analysis of salivary steroids is similarly able to characterize male pubertal development.Methods: The investigation included 165 normal boys (mean age 12.7±2.8 years, mean body mass index 19.6±4.2 kg/m2). Pubic hair stages were stratified by Tanner and testicular volum...

hrp0084p3-1060 | Hypo | ESPE2015

Transient Congenital Hyperinsulinism and Renal Fanconi Syndrome

Brichta Corinna Melanie , Pohl Martin , Lausch Ekkehart , Kohlhase Jurgen , van der Werf-Grohmann Natascha , Wurm Michael , Krause Alexandra , Schwab Karl Otfried

Background: Congenital hyperinsulinism is the most common cause of persistent hypoglycaemia in early infancy. Mutations in the HNF4A gene lead to transient hyperinsulinism in early infancy and maturity-onset diabetes of youth (MODY1), later in life. Fanconi syndrome is a generalised dysfunction of the renal proximal tubule with a loss of glucose, amino acids, phosphate, low molecular weight proteins, bicarbonate and urate, causing growth failure and rickets in childho...