The term disorders of sex development (DSD) has achieved widespread acceptance as replacement for the term intersex, but how to classify these conditions remains problematic. The LWPES-ESPE (Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society and European Society of Paediatric Endocrinology) Consensus Group proposed using the karyotype as a basis for classification; however, this is but a crude reflection of the genetic makeup, is diagnostically non-specific, and is not in itself relevant to subsequent clinical developments. The historical classification of intersex disorders based on gonadal histology is currently out of favor, being tainted by association with the terms hermaphroditism and pseudohermaphroditism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Complete continent urinary diversion not incorporating the bladder is not commonly used in children. We evaluated the short and long-term outcome of a form of continent cutaneous urinary diversion (Charleston pouch I) in children.
Materials And Methods: A total of 17 children underwent Charleston pouch I continent cutaneous urinary diversion between 1988 and 2005.
The recent approval by the US Food and Drug Administration of Deflux (Q Med, Uppsala, Sweden), a particulate biodegradable polymer of dextran, has led to an understandable enthusiasm for treating children with vesicoureteral reflux by a routinely simple outpatient endoscopic procedure. However, Deflux is but one of a variety of particulate substances, both permanent and absorbable, that have been used to treat reflux in Europe for well over a decade with varying degrees of success. The purpose of this review is to place Deflux in this wider context to anticipate what can be expected realistically regarding the efficacy and potential hazards of this seductive technique and to make recommendations regarding its incorporation, in selected cases, in our therapeutic armamentarium.
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