Publications by authors named "Karolina Gadzalska"

Article Synopsis
  • Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus (TNDM) is a rare and genetically varied condition that causes high blood sugar in newborns but may resolve early in life, potentially returning later.
  • A case study discusses a baby boy treated with insulin and glucose monitoring, achieving normal blood sugar levels by 2 months, despite not identifying common genetic mutations linked to TNDM.
  • The report emphasizes the challenges in diagnosing TNDM and suggests that using continuous insulin and glucose monitoring can be effective and safe in managing the condition.
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Variations in several nuclear genes predisposing humans to the development of MODY diabetes have been very well characterized by modern genetic diagnostics. However, recent reports indicate that variants in the mtDNA genome may also be associated with the diabetic phenotype. As relatively little research has addressed the entire mitochondrial genome in this regard, the aim of the present study is to evaluate the genetic variations present in mtDNA among individuals susceptible to MODY diabetes.

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Neonatal diabetes mellitus with congenital hypothyroidism (NDH) syndrome (MIM# 610199) is a rare disease caused by autosomal recessive mutations in the GLIS3 gene. GLIS3 is an important transcription factor that might acts as both a repressor and activator of transcription. To date, 22 cases of NDH syndrome from 16 families and 11 countries have been described.

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Objectives: The presence of two pathogenic variants in the gene leads to the occurrence of a rare genetic disease in children - Wolfram syndrome (WFS), which includes insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (DM), optic atrophy (OA), diabetes insipidus (DI), and deafness (D). However, the presence of a single mutation in the gene results in a number of other autosomal dominant inherited diseases, including Wolfram-like syndrome (WFS-like).

Case Presentation: A 10-year-old boy was referred to the Genetic Outpatient Clinic with suspected WFS based on the coexistence of D, type 1 DM, short stature, and abnormalities in ophthalmologic examination (astigmatism and OA due to the optical coherence tomography result).

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