4 results match your criteria: "University Medical Center (UMC) Groningen[Affiliation]"
Front Psychiatry
May 2024
Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Amsterdam University Medical Center (UMC) location University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Background: Stimulant medication is commonly prescribed as treatment for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). While we previously found that short-term stimulant-treatment influences apparent cortical thickness development in an age-dependent manner, it remains unknown whether these effects persist throughout development into adulthood.
Purpose: Investigate the long-term age-dependent effects of stimulant medication use on apparent cortical thickness development in adolescents and adults previously diagnosed with ADHD.
J Inherit Metab Dis
July 2024
Department of Metabolic Diseases, Beatrix Children's, University Medical Center (UMC) Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
Sulfite intoxication is the hallmark of four ultrarare disorders that are caused by impaired sulfite oxidase activity due to genetic defects in the synthesis of the molybdenum cofactor or of the apoenzyme sulfite oxidase. Delays on the diagnosis of these disorders are common and have been caused by their unspecific presentation of acute neonatal encephalopathy with high early mortality, followed by the evolution of dystonic cerebral palsy and also by the lack of easily available and reliable diagnostic tests. There is significant variation in survival and in the quality of symptomatic management of affected children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFN Engl J Med
February 2024
From the Department of Metabolic Diseases, Beatrix Children's Hospital (S.K.E., F.B., F.J.S., C.M.A.L.), and the Department of Surgery (S.K.E.), University Medical Center (UMC) Groningen, Groningen, the Division of Pediatrics (E.G.M.R., M.B., P.M.H., C.A.L.) and the Department of Metabolic Diseases (P.M.H.), UMC Utrecht, and the Department of Stem Cell Transplantation, Princess Máxima Center for Pediatric Oncology (E.G.M.R., M.B., C.A.L.), Utrecht, and the Department of Pediatrics, Gelre Hospital, Apeldoorn (D.J.P.) - all in the Netherlands.
Wolman's disease, a severe form of lysosomal acid lipase deficiency, leads to pathologic lipid accumulation in the liver and gut that, without treatment, is fatal in infancy. Although continued enzyme-replacement therapy (ERT) in combination with dietary fat restriction prolongs life, its therapeutic effect may wane over time. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) offers a more definitive solution but carries a high risk of death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Ethics
September 2023
Amsterdam University Medical Centre (UMC), Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Department of Midwifery Science, AVAG, The Amsterdam Reproduction & Development research institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.