Publications by authors named "Urszula Watrobinska"

MELAS syndrome (mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes) is a genetically determined disease caused by mutations in mitochondrial DNA. We present a girl who was suspected of MELAS syndrome during the diagnostic evaluation of short stature. The patient suffered from symptoms potentially indicating mitochondrial disease, such as muscular weakness, cranial nerve VI palsy, headaches, retinitis pigmentosa, sensory-neural hearing loss, and elevated lactic acid.

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Objectives The main cause of hyperandrogenism in children is congenital adrenal hyperplasia, adrenal and gonadal tumors, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOs) and Cushing's disease. In the last 20 years several descriptions of girls with hyperandrogenism and venous porto-systemic shunts appeared in literature. Case presentation First case is an eleven and a half-year-old girl, was admitted to Department of Endocrinology because of symptoms of hyperandrogenism.

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Article Synopsis
  • Primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease (PPNAD) is a rare, ACTH-independent form of Cushing's syndrome, with both sporadic and familial cases among patients.* -
  • The study details two patients diagnosed with PPNAD through genetic analysis, showing no unusual results in imaging of their adrenal glands or hearts.* -
  • Both patients underwent surgery to remove their adrenal glands, and genetic testing revealed specific mutations in the PRKAR1A gene, which are linked to the development of PPNAD.*
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Background: Glycogen synthase deficiency (glycogen storage disease 0 - GSD 0) caused by mutations in the GYS2 gene is characterized by a lack of glycogen synthesis in the liver. It is a rare condition of disturbed glycogen homeostasis in the liver with less than 30 cases reported in the literature so far.

Case Report: We report a 9 year old boy diagnosed with GSD 0 due to the newly identified, highly pathogenic homozygous mutation: NM_021957.

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