hrp0084p2-480 | Growth | ESPE2015

In Vitro Functional Characterization Of IGFALS Gene Variants Found In ALS Deficient or Idiopathic Short Stature (ISS) Children

Martucci Lucia , Scaglia Paula , Karabatas Liliana , Rey Rodolfo , Domene Horacio , Domene Sabina , Jasper Hector

Background: ALS deficient (ALS-D) patients present severe IGFI and IGFBP3 deficiencies and variable degree of growth retardation. Heterozygous carriers for IGFALS variants, ALS-D relatives or a subset of ISS children, have levels of IGFI, IGFBP3 and ALS intermediate between ALS-D and wildtype (WT) subjects. This supports that IGFALS gene variants may affect ALS synthesis, secretion and/or function and could be responsible for the observed phenotype.<p cla...

hrp0084p3-721 | Diabetes | ESPE2015

GAD Antibodies Negative Type 1 Diabetes and Dravet Syndrome

Ciccone Sara , Marini Romana , Fusco Lucia , Terracciano Alessandra , Schiaffini Riccardo , Cappa Marco

Background: An association between type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) and idiopathic generalized epilepsy is reported. Some authors suggest an autoimmune mechanism mediated by antibodies to glutamic-acid-decarboxylase (GAD), that is an enzyme involved in the synthesis of the neurotransmitter GABA. Dravet syndrome (DS) is a rare, severe epilepsy disorder characterized by febrile hemiclonic seizures or generalized status epilepticus starting at 6 months of age. In classical DS, a d...

hrp0084p3-1075 | Hypo | ESPE2015

Genetic Causes of Congenital Hyperinsulinism in Slovakia

Stanik Juraj , Valentinova Lucia , Skopkova Martina , Rosolankova Monika , Stanikova Daniela , Ticha Lubica , Gasperikova Daniela , Klimes Iwar

Background: Congenital hyperinsulinism (CHI) is the most common cause of the persistent hypoglycemia in children. Mutations in KCNJ11 and ABCC8 genes coding potassium channel subunits are responsible for a significant proportion of CHI patients. The type of mutation correlates with the type of B-cell hyperplasia (focal or diffuse), and determinates further diagnostics, treatment and prognosis of disorder.Aims and objectives: The aim of ...

hrp0097p2-51 | Bone, Growth Plate and Mineral Metabolism | ESPE2023

Primary hyperparathyroidism in a pediatric patient with tuberous sclerosis

Lucia Feller Ana , Mariana Aziz , Victor Ayarzabal , Ciaccio Marta , Gisela Viterbo

Introduction: Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is a rare, autosomal dominant, multisystem disease with a frequency of 1:6,000-10,000. It is caused by variants in the genes encoding hamartin (TSC 1) and tuberin (TSC 2) that normally act as inhibitors of the mTOR signaling cascade that regulates cell proliferation and migration, angiogenesis, and cell metabolism. The most frequent clinical presentation includes hypochromic macules, angiofibromas, hamartomas in the centra...

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 &amp; 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 ...

hrp0082p3-d1-975 | Thyroid | ESPE2014

Prevalence of Additional Autoimmune Diseases in Autoimmune’s Thyroiditis Children and Their First- and Second-Degree Relatives: Results from a Large, Single-Center Study

De Martino Lucia , Di Donato Iolanda , Alfano Sara , D'Acunzo Ida , Di Pinto Rosita , Capalbo Donatella , Salerno Mariacarolina

Background: Autoimmune’s thyroiditis (AT) is the most common cause of thyroid diseases in children and adolescents with a peak in early to mid-puberty (prevalence of 0.3–1.2%). Previous studies showed a high rates of familiarity for autoimmune disease (AD) and co-existing autoimmunity in AT subjects.Objective and hypotheses: Aim of our study is to investigate familiarity for AD and co-existing autoimmunity in a large cohort of pediatric AT pati...

hrp0084p3-788 | DSD | ESPE2015

Persistent Müllerian Duct Syndrome Associated with Anorchia Caused by a Compound Heterozygous Mutation in the AMHR-II Gene

Rojo Jaime Cruz , Lorenzo Lucia Garzon , Fernandez Jone Agirregoitia , del Pozo Cristina Martinez , Picard Jean-Yves , del Pozo Jaime Sanchez

Background: The persistent Müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS) is a rare 46-XY disorder of sex development, characterized by the persistence of Müllerian derivatives (uterus, Fallopian tubes) in otherwise normally virilised males. The condition is transmitted as a recessive autosomal trait and is caused in most cases by a defect in either the anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) or the AMH type-II receptor (AMHR-II) genes.Case report: We present a 9 ye...