7 results match your criteria: "KUNO Children's University Hospital[Affiliation]"

CHildhood Allergy and tolerance: Biomarkers and Predictors (CHAMP) and quality of life.

Pediatr Allergy Immunol

January 2022

Pediatric Allergology, Department of Pediatrics, Dr von Hauner Children's Hospital, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Growing up on a farm appears to protect children from developing asthma, and this research investigates why that might be by looking at the gut microbiome in infants from 2 to 12 months old.
  • - The study found that infants exposed to farms had a certain "microbiome age" linked to lower asthma risks later on, with a 19% mediation effect from this microbiome age.
  • - The presence of butyrate, a beneficial gut metabolite, and its related bacteria and enzymes were associated with reduced asthma risk, suggesting a possible connection between gut health and lung health known as the "gut-lung axis."
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Disease characteristics of MCT8 deficiency: an international, retrospective, multicentre cohort study.

Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol

July 2020

Academic Center For Thyroid Disease, Department of Internal Medicine, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands. Electronic address:

Background: Disordered thyroid hormone transport, due to mutations in the SLC16A2 gene encoding monocarboxylate transporter 8 (MCT8), is characterised by intellectual and motor disability resulting from cerebral hypothyroidism and chronic peripheral thyrotoxicosis. We sought to systematically assess the phenotypic characteristics and natural history of patients with MCT8 deficiency.

Methods: We did an international, multicentre, cohort study, analysing retrospective data from Jan 1, 2003, to Dec 31, 2019, from patients with MCT8 deficiency followed up in 47 hospitals in 22 countries globally.

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Rationale: Asthma is characterised by inflammation and reversible airway obstruction. However, these features are not always closely related. Fluctuations of daily lung function contain information on asthma phenotypes, exacerbation risk and response to long-acting β-agonists.

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Rationale: Growing up on a farm protects from childhood asthma and early wheeze. Virus-triggered wheeze in infancy predicts asthma in individuals with a genetic asthma risk associated with chromosome 17q21.

Objectives: To test environmental determinants of infections and wheeze in the first year of life, potential modifications of these associations by 17q21, and the implications for different trajectories of wheeze.

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Identifying rare genetic forms of infantile cholestasis is challenging due to their similar clinical presentation and their diverse etiology. After exclusion of common non-genetic causes a huge list of rare differential diagnosis remains to be solved. More than 90 genes are associated with monogenic forms of infantile cholestasis, thus preventing routine genetic workup by Sanger sequencing.

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In the early phase after pediatric liver transplantation (pLT) several concomitant factors may reduce the performance of established sepsis markers. To date, their clinical interpretation is hindered by a lack of information on their postoperative kinetics. To gather more information on the postoperative course and their changes in bacterial sepsis, we prospectively studied C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and procalcitonin (PCT) on 9 perioperative days in 25 consecutive pLTs.

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