Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Endemic cretinism is the most severe manifestation of dietary iodine deficiency. Two forms of the syndrome are traditionally described: neurological and myxoedematous. Although this classification highlights the important neurological sequelae of the disorder it implies that myxoedematous cretins have an alternative mechanism. Further, the nature of the neurological deficit associated with both types of endemic cretinism has received scant attention in recent times considering that it remains a common disorder in many parts of the world. The nature and extent of the neurological deficit found in endemic cretinism was investigated in 104 cretins from a predominantly myxoedematous endemia in western China and in 35 cretins from central Java, Indonesia, a predominantly neurological endemia. We found a similar pattern of neurological involvement in nearly all cretins from both endemias, regardless of type (myxoedematous or neurological), and of current thyroid function. Hallmarks of the neurological features included mental retardation, pyramidal signs in a proximal distribution and extrapyramidal signs. Many patients exhibited a characteristic gait. This probably reflected pyramidal and extrapyramidal dysfunction, although joint laxity and deformity were important contributing factors. Other frequently encountered clinical features were squint, deafness, and primitive reflexes. Cerebral computerized tomography (CT) revealed basal ganglia calcification in 15 of 50 subjects. The presence of basal ganglia calcification was confined to cretins with severe hypothyroidism. Otherwise, cerebral CT scanning demonstrated only minor abnormalities which did not contribute to the localization of the clinical deficits. We conclude that the same neurological disorder is present in both types of endemic cretinism reflecting a diffuse insult to the developing fetal nervous system. These clinical findings support the concept of maternal and fetal hypothyroxinaemia, arising from severe iodine deficiency, as the primary pathophysiological event in endemic cretinism. Differences between the two types of cretinism may be explained by continuing postnatal thyroid hormone deficiency in the myxoedematous type, which results in impaired growth, skeletal retardation and sexual immaturity.
...
PMID:The neurology of endemic cretinism. A study of two endemias. 204 52

Congenital hypothyroidism is a common but preventable cause of mental retardation. The incidence of congenital hypothyroidism in the newborn population is about 1:3500 to 1:4000. Infants with Down's syndrome are at a special risk. Fort et al. reported an incidence of persistent primary congenital hypothyroidism in infants with Down's syndrome of 1:141 or 28 times higher than the general newborn population. Premature infants have varying degrees of immaturity of hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid system and are at a special risk for a variety of thyroid disorders. These patients need adequate understanding and interpretation of their laboratory values before institution of replacement hormonal therapy. Screening programs are available in 48 states and have led to prompt diagnosis and recognition of most cases that would otherwise be missed. Prevention of mental retardation depends on early and adequate treatment. This requires close cooperation between the program and the physicians involved in the care of the infant. Many state screening programs maintain a list of experts who are available for consultation, if necessary.
...
PMID:Congenital hypothyroidism: diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis. 308 Dec 94

Congenital hypothyroidism is screened for in the UK using blood spot thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) screening at 5-8 d of age. Although standards are set by the UK Newborn Screening Programme Centre, there are variations in TSH cut-offs used. The introduction of repeat screening of preterm babies at 36 weeks' gestational age in 2005 was controversial in its utility and timing. Two cases of preterm babies are presented, who had normal blood spot TSH values on the first test and who became screen positive when re-tested at term. The first with Trisomy 21 was born at 29 + 6 weeks with an initial blood spot TSH of 3.3 mU/L rising to 263 mU/L at term-corrected gestational age (plasma TSH 476.5 mU/L). The second was born at 24 + 6 weeks' gestational age and on day 7, the heel prick blood spot TSH was <2 mU/L, rising to 6.4 mU/L at 36 weeks corrected gestational age. After a barium enema, the plasma TSH increased to 66.6 mU/L with a free thyroxine of 7.6 pmol/L at day 101. Both cases were treated with thyroxine until death due to complications of prematurity. These cases illustrate the difficulties in screening for congenital hypothyroidism in preterm infants, due to the immaturity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-thyroid axis, and the effect of intercurrent illness and drugs on thyroid function. Despite a reassuring published review of 2200 preterm infants, these cases suggest that it may be unwise not to re-screen ex-preterm infants for congenital hypothyroidism at term.
...
PMID:Hypothyroidism in preterm infants following normal screening. 2190 4