Objective: To explore the relationship between calcium and lactate in arterial cord blood of healthy term neonates in response to the stress of labor.
Methods: This was a prospective cohort study of consecutive, vaginal, term births in a community medical center (April 2029 to February 2020). Calcium and lactate were measured in cord blood gas analysis immediately after delivery.
J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab
March 2015
Consumptive hypothyroidism is a rare condition usually described in association with diffuse infantile hemangioma of the liver, over-expressing type 3 iodothyronine-deiodinase. We report a case of acquired hypothyroidism associated with a parotid hemangioma in a male child, who was initially evaluated at 48 days of age due to persistent jaundice. Replacement hormonal therapy was promptly started, but resolution of the clinical and laboratory findings of hypothyroidism was only achieved at 3 months of age, when propranolol treatment was added to the therapeutic regimen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Febrile urinary tract infections are common in children and associated with the risk for renal scarring and long-term complications. Antimicrobial prophylaxis has been used to reduce the risk for recurrence. We performed a study to determine whether no prophylaxis is similar to antimicrobial prophylaxis for 12 months in reducing the recurrence of febrile urinary tract infections in children after a first febrile urinary tract infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: The American Academy of Pediatrics recommendation for febrile infants and young children suspected of having a urinary tract infection is early antibiotic treatment, given parenterally if necessary. In support of this recommendation, data suggesting that delay in treatment of acute pyelonephritis increases the risk of kidney damage are cited. Because the risk was not well defined, we investigated renal scarring associated with delayed versus early treatment of acute pyelonephritis in children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronic hepatitis B is usually a benign disease in Caucasian children; however, the long-term prognosis remains unsettled. This report describes the results of a 29-year longitudinal study including 99 white children with chronic hepatitis B, mainly acquired horizontally: 91 were hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) positive (4 had cirrhosis), and 8 were HBeAg negative at presentation. Of the 91 HBeAg-positive children, 89 underwent HBeAg seroconversion after a mean period of 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The natural history of chronic hepatitis C acquired in infancy is not well understood. The progression of fibrosis was analyzed in untreated children with chronic hepatitis C virus infection and no other hepatotoxic cofactors.
Methods: A total of 112 pediatric patients (13 with paired liver biopsies) were considered.
The characteristics and evolution of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were retrospectively investigated in a study of 224 HCV RNA-seropositive white children who were consecutively recruited at 7 European centers in 1980-1998. At presentation, all patients were positive for antibodies to hepatitis C virus, 87% were asymptomatic, and 48% had alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels that were < or =2 times the upper limit of the range considered to be normal. Of 200 children followed for 1-17.
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