15 results match your criteria: "Univ. Children's Hospital[Affiliation]"

Background: Oral glucose tolerance (OGT) deteriorates progressively in cystic fibrosis (CF). Clinical registries provide a unique basis to study real-world data.

Patients & Methods: OGT tests (OGTTs) documented in the German CF-registry in 2016 were classified according WHO, modified by ADA: normal glucose tolerance (NGT), indeterminate glycaemia (INDET), impaired fasting glucose (IFG), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), IFG+IGT, diabetes mellitus (DM).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cerebral, ocular, dental, auricular, skeletal anomalies (CODAS) syndrome (MIM 600373) was first described and named by Shehib et al, in 1991 in a single patient. The anomalies referred to in the acronym are as follows: cerebral-developmental delay, ocular-cataracts, dental-aberrant cusp morphology and delayed eruption, auricular-malformations of the external ear, and skeletal-spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia. This distinctive constellation of anatomical findings should allow easy recognition but despite this only four apparently sporadic patients have been reported in the last 20 years indicating that the full phenotype is indeed very rare with perhaps milder or a typical presentations that are allelic but without sufficient phenotypic resemblance to permit clinical diagnosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amplification of steroid-mediated SP-B expression by physiological levels of caffeine.

Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol

January 2014

Univ. Children's Hospital, Univ. of Wuerzburg, Josef-Schneider-Str. 2, D-97080 Wuerzburg, Germany.

Factors positively influencing surfactant homeostasis in general and surfactant protein B (SP-B) expression in particular are considered of clinical importance regarding an improvement of lung function in preterm infants. The objective of this study was to identify effects of physiological levels of caffeine on glucocorticoid-mediated SP-B expression in vitro and in vivo. Levels of SP-B and pepsinogen C were quantified by quantitative real-time RT-PCR or immunoblotting in NCI-H441 cells daily exposed to caffeine and/or dexamethasone (DEX).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is involved in innate immune mechanisms. Polymorphisms of the RAGE gene have been described as a factor amplifying inflammation in susceptible patients, but the association with Crohn's disease (CD) is not known. The coding RAGE polymorphism G82S (rs2070600) and two promoter polymorphisms, -374T/A (rs1800624) and -429T/C (rs1800625), were studied in two samples from Germany and the United States consisting of 421 and 317 CD patients and 549 and 218 controls, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Traditionally, it has been assumed that intellectual development in children with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) is distributed between ranges of a normal population based on the observation that it does not differ substantially from that of children of the same age. Nevertheless, few studies have investigated this assumption. This Spanish Collaborative study was prospectively planned with two main purposes: to study a possible influence of GHD on intelligence quotient (IQ), personality traits and adaptative capacity and to study the evolution of these parameters during substitution therapy with growth hormone (GH).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reference equations that express indexes obtained from forced expiratory maneuvers in relation to height and/or other independent variables are lacking for infants and children with artificial airways. The present study was performed to establish normative data of forced expiration by forced deflation in healthy intubated and paralyzed infants and children and to develop prediction equations in relation to height and to ulna length to enable pulmonary assessments in children whose height is difficult to measure. Measurements of forced and passive expiratory maneuvers after inflation to +40 cmH(2)O inspiratory pressure were prospectively obtained in 100 healthy anesthetized children from 0 to 5 yr of age.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: alpha(2)-Macroglobulin (alpha2MG) is a broad-spectrum protease inhibitor that is known to neutralize alpha-thrombin, plasmin, and activated protein C, which suggests that it has anticoagulant as well as procoagulant properties. The present study was conducted to evaluate the role of alpha2MG in children with venous thromboembolism [VTE: paradoxical embolism causing ischemic stroke (IS) or deep-vein thrombosis (DVT)].

Methods: alpha2MG levels measured after acute VTE onset in white patients were compared with data obtained from age- and gender-matched healthy controls.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this open label pilot safety study 80 children over 3 months old with deep venous thrombosis were treated with enoxaparin with a target 4 h anti-factor Xa activity between 0.5-0.8 IU/mL.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Single units of slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors (PSRs) were investigated in anesthetized cats during spontaneous breathing on continuous positive airway pressure (2-5 cmH2O), before and after lung lavage and then after instillation of surfactant to determine the PSR response to surfactant replacement. PSRs were classified as high threshold (HT) and low threshold (LT), and their instantaneous impulse frequency (f imp) was related to transpulmonary pressure (Ptp) and tidal volume (Vt). Both the total number of impulses and maximal f imp of HT and LT PSRs decreased after lung lavage (55 and 45%, respectively) in the presence of increased Ptp and decreased Vt.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Salt handling in the distal nephron: lessons learned from inherited human disorders.

Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol

April 2005

MD, Univ. Children's Hospital, Philipps-Univ., Deutschhausstrasse 12, D-35037 Marburg, Germany.

The molecular basis of inherited salt-losing tubular disorders with secondary hypokalemia has become much clearer in the past two decades. Two distinct segments along the nephron turned out to be affected, the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop and the distal convoluted tubule, accounting for two major clinical phenotypes, hyperprostaglandin E syndrome and Bartter-Gitelman syndrome. To date, inactivating mutations have been detected in six different genes encoding for proteins involved in renal transepithelial salt transport.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acquired and inherited prothrombotic risk factors increase the risk of thrombosis in neonates, infants and children. After suffering thrombosis white paediatric patients should be screened for common gene mutations, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Management of epilepsy.

Arch Dis Child

January 2005

Neuropaediatric Unit, Univ. Children's Hospital, CHUV, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Immune thrombocytopenic purpura ITP is characterized by early platelet destruction due to an imbalanced immune response. In acute ITP, a transient increase of HLA-DR molecules has been detected while in individuals with chronic ITP, in addition, increased serum concentrations of IL-2 and other cytokines reflecting in vivo T-cell activation have been observed. Clinically, the hemorrhagic manifestation of ITP rather than the platelet count should define the indication for active intervention.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The variant von Willebrand disease (vWd) variant type 2M (Vicenza) was identified in 13 patients of 7 unrelated families. 11 patients were from different parts of germany and 2 patients from Turkey. Hitherto this variant of vWd has been described only in two families originating from the province of Vicenza in Northern Italy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF