hrp0092p1-314 | Diabetes and Insulin (2) | ESPE2019

Comparison Between Patients and Families who Routinely Download Data and Those who do Not Download Data at Home in The Management of Type 1 Diabetes

Ng Sze May , Sultana Perveen , Clemente Marisa , Apperley Louise

Background: In type 1 diabetes (T1D), optimal glycaemic control requires intensive self-management to reduce the risk of complications. While routine downloading and review of blood glucose data is part of clinical practice of healthcare providers in an outpatient setting, patients and families are also educated, advised and encouraged to regularly download and review blood glucose data at home in order to make adjustments to insulin dosing for carbohydrate in...

hrp0095hdi2.2 | How Do I… Session 2 | ESPE2022

How do I replace oestrogens in Turner syndrome?

Sas Theo

In Turner Syndrome (TS) the ovaries usually start to involute within 4 or 5 months of gestation. Consequently, the majority of patients have diminished ovarian estrogen production leading to the (Partial) absence of puberty. These girls need estrogen therapy to induce pubertal maturation. For many parents of girls with TS, talking about ovaries, puberty and, particularly, infertility is a stressful thing. However, timely age-appropriate disclosure about these subjects, startin...

hrp0092hdi2.1 | How Do I Session 2 | ESPE2019

How do I…. Manage Micropenis in a Child

Bertelloni Silvano , Tyutyusheva Nina

Micropenis is defined as a penile length less than 2.5 SD below the mean value for a given age (eg, <2.5 cm at term). Nowadays, it should be also diagnosed in utero by sonography. The incidence of micropenis has been reported as 1.5/10.000 male infants in Usa, 5/1.442 in France and 18/2710 in Brazil, suggesting geographical differences or different assessment. Micropenis represents a clinical sign, that may be part of various clinical conditions, such as hypogonad...

hrp0092hdi2.2 | How Do I Session 2 | ESPE2019

How Do I Diagnose Growth Hormone Insensitivity

Walenkamp Marie-Jose

Classical growth hormone insensitivity (GHI) is caused by a defect of the growth hormone receptor and is characterized by severe postnatal growth failure, craniofacial disproportion, IGF-I deficiency and normal or elevated levels of growth hormone. This is a rare condition. With the development of new genetic techniques during the last two decades other monogenetic defects resulting in milder forms of GHI have been identified. These include genes involved in the GH-IGF-I axis:...

hrp0092fc6.4 | Bone, Growth Plate and Mineral Metabolism Session 2 | ESPE2019

Metabolically Unhealthy Obese Children and Adolescents Have Higher Bone Mineral Density Than Normal Weighted Controls but Lower than Metabolically Healthy Obeses: No Effect of FGF21 Levels

Akduman Filiz , Siklar Zeynep , Ozsu Elif , Doğan Ozlem , Kir Metin , Berberoglu Merih

Introduction: The harmfull or benefical effect of obesity on bone mineral density (BMD) is remain controversial in children and adolescence. Either increase or decrease of BMD have been reported. Several factors such as insülin resistance, prediabetes, high proportion of fat mass, sedentary lifestyle were suggested to cause the differences of BMD in obesity. FGF-21 is a metabolic factor that plays a specific role in the regulation of carbohydrate and lipi...

hrp0082p2-d3-394 | Fat Metabolism &amp; Obesity (2) | ESPE2014

From the Need of Preventing Infantile Obesity as soon as Possible: a New Score at Birth

Sanz Nuria , Asencio M Jesus , Buj Angeles , Marzo Corpus , Rodriguez Juan Manuel , Sanchez Consol , Ibanez Lourdes , Marcos Maria Victoria

Background: Infantile obesity is nowadays a pandemic disease and needs a paediatrician interventional attitude. Since 1990 until 2010 it has trebled and the World Health Organization recommends prevention ‘as soon as possible’ even during the first year of life. A Spanish study (Aladino 2011) stimated the prevalence of overweight in boys as a 26.3% and in girls a 25.9% and the prevalence of obesity as a 22% and a 16.2% respectively. Our aim was to set up a new score ...

hrp0097p2-52 | Bone, Growth Plate and Mineral Metabolism | ESPE2023

Patient with ABCD syndrome (Abnormal Calcium, Calcinosis, Creatinine in Down syndrome), a rare cause of pediatric hypercalcemia

Lucia Feller Ana , Aziz Mariana , Gil Silvia , Quarracino Malena , Mendoza Lincolns , Paz Marcos , Vaiani Elisa , Ciaccio Marta , Viterbo Gisela

Introduction: ABCD syndrome is characterized by hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and renal impairment, generally under 4 years old. This is a rare cause of pediatric hypercalcemia with only 7 cases published, but it is believed to be underdiagnosed. The suspected mechanism would be associated with overexpression of transient receptor potential channels (TRP) that modulate intestinal absorption of calcium, since TRP-M2 is encoded on chromosome 2...

hrp0089p3-p346 | Sex Differentiation, Gonads and Gynaecology or Sex Endocrinology P3 | ESPE2018

Ovotesticular Disorder of Sexual Development: 31 Cases Followed-up in a Single-Center in Brazil

Melardi Julia , Cunha Diego , Ferreira Marianna , Brigatti Nathalia , Carvalho Filomena , Cominato Louise , Steinmetz Leandra , Damiani Durval

The Ovotesticular Disorder of Sexual Development (OT DSD) is a rare condition characterized by histologic demonstration of both ovarian and testicular tissue in the same individual. Descriptions in literature usually have small samples and do not include patient evolution data. The aim of this study is to describe clinical, biochemical and histological findings, as well as long-term outcomes (including onset and progression of puberty) in patients with OT DSD, accompanied betw...

hrp0095p1-47 | Diabetes and Insulin | ESPE2022

Congenital hyperinsulinism: a case with a missense monoallelic heterozygous ABCC8 mutation responsive partially to diazoxide therapy

Tien Son Do , Phuong Thao Bui , Ngoc Khanh Nguyen , Thi Bich Ngoc Can , Hoang Lan Nguyen , Thi Tu Anh Dao , Trong Thanh Nguyen , Thi Thanh Mai Do , Thi Anh Thuong Tran , Chi Dung Vu

Congenital hyperinsulinism (CHI) is a rare hereditary condition that causes excessive insulin production in the clinical picture of severe hypoglycemia. Patients with CHI frequently have mutations in the ABCC8 and KCNJ11 genes, which code for KATP channels in pancreatic beta cells. We present a case of partial diazoxide responsiveness caused by a heterozygous ABCC8 mutation in a child with moderate CHI. A four-month-old term baby with a ...

hrp0095hdi2.1 | How Do I… Session 2 | ESPE2022

How do I …Manage communication with families after onset of T1D?

Lange Karin

Even today, the majority of families are caught completely unprepared by the diagnosis of diabetes in their child. The "bad news" hits them like a bolt from the blue and calls into question the future plans of parents and children. The first talk with the paediatric diabetologist, in which the diagnosis is communicated and the therapy is roughly outlined, sets the course for the acceptance of diabetes in the family and the long-term trusting cooperation with the diab...