Context: The adrenal gland undergoes substantial remodeling during the neonatal period, an essential developmental process that remains incompletely understood. With respect to control over the remodeling process and, specifically, the role of thyroid hormones (THs), no human studies have been published. The effects of both hypo- and hyperthyroidism have only been evaluated in adults, focusing on the mature adrenal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: In our neonatal program, a number of infants with congenital hypothyroidism (CH) had escaped diagnosis, when a spot RIA-TSH value of 20 mU/liter whole blood was used as a cutoff point.
Objective: The objective of the study was to find out prospectively the additional number of newborns with CH if the TSH cutoff point is lowered to 10 mU/liter.
Population And Methods: The study included 311,390 screened newborns.
The aim of the work was to assess thyroid function in children and adolescents in an iodine replete area and to explore possible effects of age, gender, puberty, and adiposity. Thyrotropin (TSH), total triiodothyronine (T (3)), total thyroxine (T (4)), free thyroxine (FT (4)), and the T (4)/T (3) ratio were determined for 440 schoolchildren (200 boys and 240 girls), aged 5-18 years, living in an iodine replete region. Body Mass Index (BMI), BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS), and Body Surface Area (BSA) were calculated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Thyroid volume (TV) varies between geographical regions. Thus, population-specific references for TV in regions with long-standing iodine sufficiency may be more accurate than a single international reference.
Aim: The aim of the study was to determine TV and assess the prevalence of goiter and thyroid nodules in schoolchildren aged 5-18 years living in an iodine-replete area.
An earlier adiposity rebound, suggestive of adult obesity, has been reported in children with congenital hypothyroidism. We undertook this study to evaluate the effect of congenital hypothyroidism on: 1) the timing of adiposity rebound, 2) the long-term prognosis of BMI status, and 3) the factors potentially affecting adiposity in subjects with congenital hypothyroidism. We found that in children with congenital hypothyroidism the BMI values were higher during the first years of life compared to normal population, but subsequently normalized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe neonatal screening program for congenital hypothyroidism (CH) in Greece shows an overall incidence of the disease of 1:2321. The cases with permanent CH have an incidence of 1:2542, whereas the transient forms of CH account for 8.7% of all cases diagnosed as CH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of the present study was to examine the effects of chronic iodide administration in pharmacological doses on thyroid function in children with a history of transient congenital hypothyroidism (TCH). We hypothesized that such children may carry a previously undisclosed intrinsic intrathyroidal defect, rendering them susceptible to TCH. We administered for this 60-65 mg iodide daily for 60 d in 13 individuals with TCH (group A), 8 of their siblings (group B), 8 healthy controls (group C), and 11 normal adults (group D).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Greek screening program for primary congenital hypothyroidism was initiated in 1979. By early 2000, thyrotropin measurements had been performed in 1,976,719 newborns, using dried blood spots obtained by heel prick. Among these children, 584 were diagnosed with congenital hypothyroidism (incidence: 1/3,384 births) and were given L-thyroxine (L-T4) replacement therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone mineral status was assessed in 48 children with phenylketonuria (PKU) (20M, 28 F, aged 2.5-17 y). Bone density was measured in the distal third of the right forearm using single photon absorptiometry and was expressed as +/-SD with respect to age- and gender-matched controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: The effects of human growth hormone (hGH) therapy on biochemical markers of bone metabolism were studied in 17 children (10 boys and 7 girls, aged 3.7-13.1 years old) with idiopathic GH deficiency, before and 1 and 6 months after GH therapy (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransient hyperprolactinaemia has been reported to follow unprovoked seizures, a finding proposed to be useful in the differential diagnosis of epilepsy. There is also evidence that patients with unprovoked seizures may have high baseline prolactin levels, which could be of value in detecting those predisposed to epilepsy after a first convulsive attack. The purpose of this study was to examine whether prolactin levels are elevated: (1) postictally in febrile seizures and (2) interictally in afebrile seizures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNewborn screening for Congenital Hypothyroidism, using TSH measurement in dried blood spots, was started in Greece in 1979. A total of 1,274,000 neonates have been screened and 377 cases of Congenital Hypothyroidism were detected, for an incidence of 1:3370. Employing a cut-off point of 30 mU/L of TSH in whole blood, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe long-term effect of hydrochlorothiazide (HCT) was studied in 30 children (17 boys and 13 girls), aged 4-13 years (mean 7.6 +/- 3.4), with renal hypercalciuria (HCU) for a period of 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFalpha-Fetoprotein (alpha-FP) was measured in dried blood spots from normal, congenital hypothyroid (CH) and transient hyperthyrotropinemic (TH) newborns as well as in serum from CH and TH babies together with thyroxine, triiodothyronine and thyrotropin. The half-life of alpha-FP had a median value of 12 days in the CH cases and 4.9 days in the TH cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalcium loading tests were performed in 21 children with hypercalciuria, haematuria and/or nephrolithiasis and 10 control subjects. Comparisons of 24-h calcium excretion before and after loading were evaluated rather than fasting urinary calcium to urinary creatinine ratio. The differences in calcium excretion before and after loading clearly distinguished absorptive from renal hypercalciuria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1979 a national screening programme for congenital hypothyroidism (CH) was introduced in Greece. Treatment with L-thyroxine was started immediately after confirmation of the diagnosis, at a median age of 28 days. A standardized development test (Griffiths) was given to a group of CH infants and to healthy controls at the ages of 5-7, 11-13, 17-19, and 23-25 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe observation of Campbell and Price in 1979 that their Unit had diagnosed four subjects with both Klinefelter's syndrome and congenital hypothyroidism raised the suspicion of an association between the two conditions. This, and the published reports of an XX male, five XXY males, and one mosaic XY/XXY with congenital or acquired forms of hypothyroidism, together with the higher incidence in women and the absence of sex difference among inherited congenital cases, suggested a possible sex chromosome effect in the aetiology of sporadic hypothyroidism. Various hypotheses can be tested either by examining the frequency of hypothyroidism in sex chromatin positive males or by establishing a higher frequency of sex chromatin positive males among hypothyroid cases than in normal males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne year's experience in screening for congenital hypothyroidism in Greece is reported. Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) determination by a radioimmunoassay on dried blood spots was selected as the screening method. During the first year of screening 75,879 newborn infants were tested from Guthrie blood spots taken on the 5th day of life.
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