Publications by authors named "GRUNT J"

Forensic facial approximation is used as a tool for recreating the antemortem appearance of unknown dead and thus facilitates their identification. Several approaches to facial approximation are based on data on facial soft tissue thicknesses (FSTTs). The availability of sex-, age- and population-specific data contributes to the accuracy of the resulting facial approximation model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM1) are at an even greater risk compared to the general population for the development of cardiovascular disease. Studies have determined that the pathological changes seen in atherosclerosis develop at a very early age. There is a growing consensus within the medical community that early identification of chronic disease may help to reduce morbidity and mortality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To determine whether concise parameters can be established in girls who present with signs of early puberty before the age of 8 years, which would help to identify those in whom cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is indicated.

Methods: A retrospective chart review was undertaken over a 10-year period from 1992-2002. The two requirements for inclusion in this study were girls who manifested pubertal changes before the age of 8.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The growth promoting effects of once nightly subcutaneous injections of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) 1-29 (30 microg/kg) for 6 months were studied in 16 slowly growing prepubertal children with idiopathic short stature (ISS; Group 1) and 8 similar children with growth hormone neurosecretory dysfunction (GHND; Group 2). Each child underwent endogenous growth hormone evaluation using both pharmacological and physiological testing; each had stimulated values > 10 microg/l and were subsequently placed into one of two groups based on pooled 12-hour overnight GH of < or > or = 3 microg/l. Each patient was followed every three months for one year.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The efficacy and safety of 1 yr of GH-releasing hormone [GHRH-(1-29)] therapy in GH-deficient children were determined. One hundred and ten previously untreated prepubertal GH-deficient children were treated for up to 1 yr in a multicenter, open label study with 30 micrograms/kg GHRH-(1-29)/day, sc, given at bedtime. Eighty-six of the 110 patients were eligible for efficacy analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Seven children with significant idiopathic short stature (SISS) whose heights were significantly below the third percentile (SD score for height -2.5 to -3.5) and who had normal levels of growth hormone (GH) were treated with growth hormone releasing hormone (GH-RH) in a dose of 30 micrograms/kg/day.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The minimal effective dose of growth hormone (GH) to promote growth in children on dialysis or following renal transplantation remains unsettled. In order to study the issue, "low-dose" GH was administered to children with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) receiving chronic automated peritoneal dialysis (APD, n = 6, 4 males, 2 females) or following renal transplantation (T, n = 9, 8 males, 1 female). No APD patient was GH deficient, while 1 T patient (no.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In an attempt to rest the beta cells of newly diagnosed children with type I diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and thus possibly preserve beta cell function, ten children were given Octreotide, a somatostatin analog, for the first 21 days after diagnosis. Ten age-matched diabetic children served as controls. Although there were no differences in either insulin requirements or in hemoglobin A1 levels, there were significant increases in the glucagon-stimulated C-peptide levels of the experimental group at six and 12 months after diagnosis, compared to control patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 14.8 year old boy was evaluated for galactorrhea of two months duration and growth deceleration for greater than three years. He was 3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adrenal abnormalities are rarely recognized in association with the nephrotic syndrome. This report describes the hospital course of an 11-week-old child with congenital nephrotic syndrome secondary to diffuse mesangial sclerosis, in addition to hypothyroidism and hypoadrenocorticism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Over a period of ten years prophylactic administration of selected antibiotics was evaluated three times (in 1973, 1983, and in 1988) in the same ten hospitals of the Slovak Republic. The study was focused on the use of gentamicin (GEN), cotrimoxasol (COT) and cephalosporins (CEP). Prophylactic administration of antibiotics was found to be increasing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The authors investigated the administration of monitored antibiotics, i.e. gentamicin, cephalosporins and cotrimoxazol, as well as of other so-called not monitored antibiotics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The authors compared the Slovak and Czech part of the IVth nation-wide anthropological survey of children and youth from birth to the age of 18 years and evaluated the revealed differences in height, body weight, head and chest circumferences. The results confirm the assumed further approximation of growth values of the two child populations and the gradual equalization recorded in particular in the youngest age groups.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Trimorphamide, a new fungicide, was fed over 2 years to groups of 50 male and 50 female rats at dietary levels of 0, 67, 330 and 665 mg/kg. No adverse effects on mortality, haematology, urinalysis, organ weights, incidence and severity of tumors were observed. Isolated observations of abnormalities in blood chemistry suggested the possibility of certain renal damage in the highest dosage group; however, the clinical significance of these findings is dubious.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Placental transfer of cadmium, lead and mercury was studied under the conditions of environmental exposures of pregnant women to these heavy metals. Fifty pregnant women from industrial area and a similar control group from a semirural area were examined. Cadmium, lead and total mercury levels were determined in maternal erythrocytes and plasma, in placenta, and in erythrocytes and plasma of umbilical cord blood using atomic absorption spectrophotometry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to evaluate the effects of oral contraceptives on metabolic and endocrine function in teenagers, Norinyl 1/50 was begun in 46 12-17-year-old girls after a 16-hour-fasting blood sample was obtained for glucose, insulin, glucagon, growth hormone, luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone, prolactin, gluconeogenic substrates, total lipids, and cholesterol. Sampling was repeated at 6 and 12 months of therapy. Of the 46 patients enrolled in the study, 23 returned for follow-up after 6 months, and 13 completed the study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is evident from studies of boys who suffered a surgical catastrophe at a young age and were then assigned a female sex role that cultural and environmental influence are a potent determinant of a child's gender identity. It is imperative that parents have their child's sex assignment firmly fixed in their minds as early as possible. Early surgical correction of a child with ambiguous genitalia to conform to the sex of assignment will serve greatly to reinforce appropriate behavior in the parent.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF