hrp0084p1-129 | Thyroid | ESPE2015

Intelligence and Behaviour in Children and Adolescents with Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis

Boettcher Claudia , Brosig Burkhard , Windhaus Henriette , Wudy Stefan A , Hahn Andreas

Background: Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune-mediated disorder, and is the most common cause of thyroid disease and acquired hypothyroidism in children and adolescents. In adults with HT, concentration problems, memory disorders and an increased rate of depression have been reported.Objective and hypotheses: To investigate, whether children and adolescents with HT have more behaviour and emotional problems, and/or lower intelligence tha...

hrp0084p2-426 | GH & IGF | ESPE2015

The Acid-Labile Subunit Dose Matters? Response to Human GH Treatment in Patients with Acid-Labile Subunit Deficiency

Bechtold Susanne , Roeb Julia , Weissenbacher Claudia , Sydlik Carmen , Schmidt Heinrich

Background: In patients with acid-labile subunit (ALS) deficiency, the inability to build ternary complexes results in a marked reduction of circulating total IGF1. Height reduction by heterozygosity is about 1 SD in comparison to wild type. In homozygosity or compound heterozygosity a height loss of −2 to −2.5 SD occurs. This is suggestive of a gene-dose effect. How does treatment with human GH influence height development in relation...

hrp0084p2-510 | Pituitary | ESPE2015

Chronic Inappropriate Antidiuresis in Childhood: Experience with Tolvaptan

Gaudino Rossella , Piona Claudia , Morandi Grazia , Cavarzere Paolo , Brugnara Milena

Background: The syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis (SIAD) is one of the most common causes of hyponatremia: it’s a disorder of sodium and water balance, characterized by urinary dilution impairment and hypotonic hyponatremia, in the absence of renal disease or any non-osmotic stimulus, able to induce antidiuretic hormone (ADH) release. SIAD can be manifestation of a wide range of diseases, including cancer, head trauma, hydrocephalus and epilepsy. Usually transient an...

hrp0084p3-1211 | Thyroid | ESPE2015

Rectal Diluted Levothyroxine for the Treatment of Neonatal Hypothyroidism: An Alternative Route of Administration

Ybarra Marina , Pinheiro Claudia , Setian Nuvarte , Damiani Durval , Dichtcekennian Vae

Background: Most individuals with neonatal hypothyroidism present clinically asymptomatic or with few symptoms. Early treatment with oral levothyroxine prevents complications related to this disorder. We report a case of a male infant with Short Bowel syndrome (SBS) and congenital hypothyroidism (CH) treated with rectal levothyroxine.Case and presentations: A male patient with previous gastroschisis underwent multiple surgical approaches for small bowel ...

hrp0097p2-57 | Bone, Growth Plate and Mineral Metabolism | ESPE2023

Heterozygous mutations in SETD5 are associated with bone fragility

Blaschitz Alexandra , Aischwarya Rao Avula , Castiglioni Claudia , Balasubramanian Meena

Background: SET domain-containing 5 (SETD5) is an uncharacterized member of the protein lysine methyltransferase family, a group best known for its ability to methylate their substrate and, by that, regulate gene expression. Heterozygous pathogenic variants in SETD5 are known to cause neurodevelopmental delay. We present two children with pathogenic variants in SETD5 and vertebral fractures with low bone mass. Individual 1 This 15-year old male of Caucasian an...

hrp0097p2-99 | Sex Differentiation, Gonads and Gynaecology, and Sex Endocrinology | ESPE2023

Three cases of Leydig cell tumor with different clinical presentation

Hidalgo Coronado Lorena , Rampi Gabriela , Brunetto Oscar , Hernandez Claudia

Leydig cell tumors(LCTs) are rare testicular tumors, representing 1-3% of them. They are usually unilateral but can be bilateral up to 3%. Its incidence is bimodal, peaking at 5-10 years (20%) and 25-35 year (80%). Malignant transformation has not been clearly proven in children, whereas in adults they are malignant in 10% of cases. The main clinical manifestation is a palpable, painless testicular mass associated in a variable percentage with endocrinological manifestations t...

hrp0095lb15 | Late Breaking | ESPE2022

Examining Sedentary and Activity Status Predictors in Adolescents and Their Implications for Diabetes Prevention

Balhara Maria

Background: Physical activity (PA) has been conclusively shown to reduce the incidence of diabetes in prior research. A 2,000 steps/day increment yielded hazard ratio (HR) 0.88 for incidence of diabetes 95% CI 0.78–1.00; P=0.046 (Garduno, 2022). Despite this, the role of different factors associated with higher adolescent after-school PA is understudied after the coronavirus pandemic, during which a greater proportion of parents worked remotely....

hrp0089s9.2 | Novel advances in endocrine imaging | ESPE2018

Novel CNS Imaging Techniques

Argyropoulou Maria

Novel CNS imaging techniques is a fast advancing field with frequent new developments in scanner’s hardware, protocols, clinical indications, and post-processing techniques. These techniques are designed to focus on the assessment of functional tissue characteristics, such as neuronal activity (functional MRI- fMRI), microstructural properties (diffusion tensor imaging-DTI) and tissue perfusion (DSC perfusion, ASL). fMRI reveals brain activation during performance of beha...

hrp0089na1.1 | The clinical relevance of metabolomics; genomic engineering - CRISP-R/Cas9 and its many implications | ESPE2018

The Clinical Relevance of Metabolomics

Klapa Maria

High-throughput biomolecular (omic) analyses enabled the simultaneous quantification of hundreds or thousands of transcripts, proteins, metabolites in a biological system, contributing to the identification of discriminatory multi-component molecular profiles of a pathophysiology. Molecular quantities being interconnected, even subtle differences in one can carry significance if viewed in the context of the observed changes in the rest of the molecules. We can now view molecul...

hrp0089p2-p216 | GH & IGFs P2 | ESPE2018

Incidence and Prevalence of GH Deficiency in the Russian Federation – An Analysis of Two Registries

Vorontsova Maria

Background: GH therapy for GH deficient (GHD) children in Russia is fully state funded as part of the ‘Seven high expenditure diseases’ (7HED) federal program. Thus, it is important to thoroughly understand the disorder, including its epidemiology. In Russia, there are two parallel functioning registries: the official federal medical statistics (OFMS) which provides purely statistical information and the 7HED registry which must contain a patient’s data to make ...