We examined length, height and weight from birth to six years of age and head circumference during the first two years in 89 children with congenital hypothyroidism (CH). The patients were divided in two groups: children diagnosed by clinical criteria during the first year of life (group A) and children detected by neonatal screening (group B). Group A showed a complete catch up growth for height and weight 10 months after the beginning of the replacement therapy; to the contrary, group B did not show any difference for height and weight compared to normal standards.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMinerva Pediatr
October 1991
We report one case of congenital hypothyroidism with thyroid agenesis wrongly considered as a transient form of hypothyroidism. The patient came to our attention at 9 months of age, showing an important delay in neuromotor development. Transient hypothyroidism is a situation of brief hormonal deficit with spontaneous resolution in the first weeks of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA group of infants, affected by congenital hypothyroidism diagnosed through the neonatal screening program, was investigated with echocardiography to detect the presence of pericardial effusion. We studied the relationship between the effusion and the etiology of hypothyroidism, established through thyroid scintiscanning. Our data show a high prevalence of effusion in hypothyroid patients, without other clinical signs of cardiac involvement as well as a relationship between the etiology of hypothyroidism and the presence of effusion.
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