Search results for "infant"

showing 10 items of 3339 documents

Implication of lipids in macrosomia of diabetic pregnancy: can n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids exert beneficial effects?

2003

Macrosomia or fetal obesity is a frequent complication of pregnancy in diabetes mellitus. Several alterations observed in carbohydrate and lipid metabolism in macrosomic infants of diabetic mothers are thought to be a consequence of maternal hyperglycaemia leading to fetal hyperinsulinaemia. Macrosomic infants of diabetic mothers are prone to the development of glucose intolerance, obesity and diabetes during childhood and adulthood. Furthermore, increasing evidence is accumulating regarding the importance of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) in the reduction of plasma lipids and hyperglycaemia. In this review article, we shed light on the abnormalities in lipid metabolism in macrosom…

AdultBlood GlucoseMalemedicine.medical_specialtyendocrine system diseasesLipoproteinsPregnancy in DiabeticsFetal MacrosomiaPregnancyDiabetes mellitusInternal medicineFatty Acids Omega-3Diabetes MellitusmedicineAnimalsHumansObesitychemistry.chemical_classificationPregnancyFetusbusiness.industryMetabolic disorderInfant NewbornLipid metabolismGeneral MedicineLipid Metabolismmedicine.diseaseObesityGestational diabetesEndocrinologychemistryFemaleInsulin ResistancebusinessPolyunsaturated fatty acidClinical Science
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Pharmacotherapy for gestational diabetes mellitus: still insulin, or what about sulfonylureas?

2018

Randomized trials have not focused on neonatal complications of glyburide for women with gestational diabetes.To compare oral glyburide vs subcutaneous insulin in prevention of perinatal complications in newborns of women with gestational diabetes.The Insulin Daonil trial (INDAO), a multicenter noninferiority randomized trial conducted between May 2012 and November 2016 (end of participant follow-up) in 13 tertiary care university hospitals in France including 914 women with singleton pregnancies and gestational diabetes diagnosed between 24 and 34 weeks of gestation.Women who required pharmacologic treatment after 10 days of dietary intervention were randomly assigned to receive glyburide …

AdultBlood Glucosemedicine.medical_specialtyendocrine system diseasesInjections Subcutaneousmedicine.medical_treatmentAdministration Oral030209 endocrinology & metabolism.OverweightInfant Newborn DiseasesFetal Macrosomia03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePharmacotherapyInsulin resistancePregnancyInternal medicineGlyburidemedicineHumansHypoglycemic AgentsInsulin030212 general & internal medicineFamily historyHyperbilirubinemiabusiness.industryInsulinInfant NewbornPregnancy Outcomenutritional and metabolic diseasesType 2 Diabetes MellitusGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseHypoglycemiafemale genital diseases and pregnancy complicationsGestational diabetesDiabetes GestationalEditorialEndocrinologyFemalemedicine.symptomMetabolic syndromebusinessAnnals of Translational Medicine
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Retinoblastoma epidemiology: Does the evidence matter?

2007

It has been proposed that retinoblastoma is 'caused' by two sequential mutations affecting the RB1 gene, but this is a rather outdated view of cancer aetiology that does not take into account a large amount of new acquisitions such as chromosomal and epigenetic alterations. Retinoblastoma remains probably the only cancer in which the rather simplistic 'two hit' mutational model is still considered of value, although cancer is known to be associated with genomic and microsatellite instability, defects of the DNA mismatch repair system, alterations of DNA methylation and hystone acethylation/deacethylation, and aneuploidy. Moreover, as it is shown herein, the predictions made by the 'two hit'…

AdultCancer ResearchAdolescentRetinal NeoplasmsRetinoblastoma Aneuploidy Two hit theoryDiseaseBiologyAge DistributionChromosome instabilitymedicineHumansEpigeneticsAge of OnsetChildGerm-Line MutationGeneticsRetinoblastomaRetinoblastomaMicrosatellite instabilityCancerInfantMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePedigreeSettore BIO/18 - GeneticaOncologyChild PreschoolDNA methylationDNA mismatch repair
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Cancer in children and adolescents in Europe: Developments over 20 years and future challengers

2006

This special issue contains 18 articles describing population-based analyses of incidence and survival for cancer among children and adolescents in Europe over the period 1978-1997. The analyses were derived from the large database of the ACCIS project (Automated Childhood Cancer Information System), which was built through collaboration of 62 population-based cancer registries in 19 European countries. Data on 88,465 cancers in children and 15,369 in adolescents (age 15-19 yrs) were included in the various analyses, making this the largest database on cancer in these age-groups in the world. National data were grouped into five European regions to allow comparisons of incidence and surviva…

AdultCancer ResearchPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtycancer incidenceTime FactorsAdolescentDatabases FactualPopulationSDG 3 - Good Health and Well-beingNeoplasmsmedicineHumansRegistriesMortalityeducationChildeducation.field_of_studycancer incidence; Childhood cancers - survival - time trendsbusiness.industryPublic healthIncidence (epidemiology)IncidenceConfoundingInfant NewbornCancerInfantmedicine.diseaseSurvival AnalysisEuropeOncologyEl NiñoData qualityChild PreschoolEtiologybusinessChildhood cancers - survival - time trendsDemography
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Individual and neighbourhood socioeconomic measures and the risk of non-central nervous system solid tumours in children: A nationwide register-based…

2021

Abstract Background The aetiology for most solid tumours in childhood is largely unknown. The lack of evidence concerns also the relationship between socioeconomic position (SEP) and risk of childhood solid tumours other than in the central nervous system (CNS). We sought to access the association between individual and neighbourhood SEP measures and risk of childhood non-CNS solid tumours in Denmark and to evaluate whether associations varied by measure of SEP, time point of SEP assessment (during pregnancy versus before diagnosis) and tumour type. Methods We conducted a nationwide case-control study based on Danish registry data. We identified all children born in 1980–2013 and diagnosed …

AdultCancer ResearchRegister-based studyAdolescentEpidemiologyDenmarkPopulationCentral Nervous System NeoplasmsArea-based socioeconomic positionDanishYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePregnancyResidence CharacteristicsRisk FactorsmedicineHumansRegistries030212 general & internal medicineChildeducationSocioeconomic statusNeighbourhood (mathematics)Pregnancyeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryChildhood solid tumoursInfant NewbornCase-control studyInfantmedicine.diseaselanguage.human_languageCancer registrySocioeconomic positionSocioeconomic FactorsOncologyCase-Control StudiesChild Preschool030220 oncology & carcinogenesislanguageEtiologyFemalebusinessDemographyCancer Epidemiology
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Human papilloma virus (HPV)-associated gynecological alteration in mothers of children with recurrent respiratory papillomatosis during long-term obs…

2007

Abstract Background : Human papilloma virus (HPV) is one of the most frequently observed sexually transmitted infections. The study' purpose was to investigate the relation between a mother's gynecological history and the local status of her child with recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP). Methods : Forty-two patients enrolled in a prospective multicenter study between 1983 and 1990. The study included patients with juvenile-onset and adult-onset RRP. All patients underwent surgery and treatment with α-interferon. Thirty-eight patients were followed up until 31.01.2006. Twenty-five mothers of these patients participated in a parallel prospective study of genital HPV infection. In 1989…

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentmedicine.medical_treatmentVaginal DiseasesPapillomatosisUterine Cervical DiseasesPregnancyRecurrenceRisk FactorsPrevalencemedicineHumansLongitudinal StudiesPregnancy Complications InfectiousChildProspective cohort studyReproductive HistoryAgedColposcopyGynecologyHysterectomyPapillomamedicine.diagnostic_testObstetricsbusiness.industryPapillomavirus InfectionsHPV infectionInfantMiddle AgedCondyloma AcuminatumHuman papillomavirus 6medicine.diseaseRespiratory Tract NeoplasmsKoilocyteOncologyChild PreschoolFemaleRecurrent Respiratory Papillomatosismedicine.symptombusinessCancer Detection and Prevention
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Cancer consequences of the Chernobyl accident in Europe outside the former USSR: A review

1996

The accident which occurred during the night of April 25-26, 1986 in reactor 4 of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in the Ukraine released considerable amounts of radioactive substances into the environment. Outside the former USSR, the highest levels of contamination were recorded in Bulgaria, Austria, Greece and Romania, followed by other countries of Central, Southeast and Northern Europe. Studies of the health consequences of the accident have been carried out in these countries, as well as in other countries in Europe. This report presents the results of a critical review of cancer studies of the exposed population in Europe, carried out on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the …

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyNeoplasms Radiation-InducedAdolescentEnvironmental protectionNeoplasmsmedicineHumansThyroid NeoplasmsChildSocioeconomicsAccident (philosophy)AgedLeukemia Radiation-InducedHealth consequencesIncidencePublic healthInfant NewbornInfantDose-Response Relationship RadiationEnvironmental exposureMiddle Agedcancer ; thyroid ; leukaemia ; nuclear accident ; ChernobylEuropeGeographyOncologyChild PreschoolRadioactive Hazard ReleaseUkrainePower PlantsInternational Journal of Cancer
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Protein aggregation in congenital myopathies.

2011

Protein aggregation in congenital myopathies may be encountered among different myofibrillar myopathies such as granulofilamentous myopathy, cytoplasmic body myopathy, or spheroid body myopathy, which are designated as αB crystallinopathy, desminopathy, and myotilinopathy, respectively, according to the respective mutant proteins. Caps in cap disease and reducing bodies in reducing body myopathy were disclosed to contain numerous proteins. The multitude of diverse proteins aggregating within muscle fibers suggests impaired extralysosomal degradation of proteins, a disturbance of catabolism. The lack of different proteins accruing, but the mutant ones at an early age of affected patients in …

AdultCatabolismMutantInfantProtein aggregationBiologySarcomereActinsDesminBiochemistryChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthMyosinMutationmedicineHumansMutant ProteinsNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomMyopathyMyofibrilChildActinMyopathies Structural CongenitalSeminars in pediatric neurology
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Pregnancy in primary sclerosing cholangitis

2011

Background There is a paucity of data on fertility or pregnancy in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). Objective To assess fertility in PSC by comparing the number of children in a large cohort of PSC patients to healthy controls and to investigate the outcome of pregnancy, as well as the influence of pregnancy on the disease course. Design Case series. Setting Germany. Participants 229 PSC patients and 569 healthy controls were evaluated for the number of children. 17 patients with PSC and at least one pregnancy, or who received a diagnosis of PSC within 6 months after delivery, were included in the more detailed analysis. Main outcome measures Number of children per patien…

AdultCholagogues and Cholereticsmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectCholangitis SclerosingFertilityAutoimmune hepatitisPrimary sclerosing cholangitisYoung AdultPregnancyRisk FactorsGermanyAzathioprinemedicineHumansYoung adultmedia_commonPregnancyFetusObstetricsbusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)Ursodeoxycholic Aciddigestive oral and skin physiologyInfant NewbornPregnancy OutcomeGastroenterologymedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesPregnancy ComplicationsImmunologyGestationFemalebusinessImmunosuppressive AgentsFollow-Up StudiesGut
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Lifestyle intervention to limit gestational weight gain: the Norwegian Fit for Delivery randomised controlled trial

2015

Objective To examine whether a lifestyle intervention in pregnancy limits gestational weight gain (GWG) and provides measurable health benefits for mother and newborn. Design Randomised controlled trial. Setting Healthcare clinics of southern Norway. Population Healthy, non-diabetic, nulliparous women, aged ≥18 years, with a body mass index of ≥19 kg/m2 , and with a singleton pregnancy at ≤20 weeks of gestation. Methods Women were randomised to an intervention group (with dietary counselling twice by telephone and access to twice-weekly exercise groups) or to a control group (with standard prenatal care). Participants were measured three times during pregnancy and at delivery, and newborns …

AdultCounselingPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyPopulationPrenatal careWeight GainBody Mass Indexlaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDouble-Blind MethodRandomized controlled trialPregnancylawmedicineHumansObesity030212 general & internal medicineeducationExerciseLife Styleeducation.field_of_studyPregnancy030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineIntention-to-treat analysisNorwayObstetricsbusiness.industryInfant NewbornObstetrics and GynecologyPrenatal CareOverweightDelivery Obstetricmedicine.diseaseConfidence intervalPregnancy ComplicationsCase-Control StudiesGestationFemalebusinessBody mass indexBJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology
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