168 research outputs found

    Verkennende studie graadmeter natuurwaarde laagveenwateren

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    Introduction

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    A Systematic Approach to Evaluate Sudden Unexplained Death in Children

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    Objective: To evaluate in the Netherlands the national outcomes in providing cause of and insights into sudden and unexplained child deaths among children via the Postmortem Evaluation of Sudden Unexplained Death in Youth (PESUDY) procedure. Study design: Children aged 0-18 years in the Netherlands who died suddenly were included in the PESUDY procedure if their death was unexplained and their parents gave consent. The PESUDY procedure consists of pediatric and forensic examination, biochemical, and microbiological tests; radiologic imaging; autopsy; and multidisciplinary discussion. Data on history, modifiable factors, previous symptoms, performed diagnostics, and cause of death were collected between October 2016 and December 2021. Results: In total, 212 cases (median age 11 months, 56% boys, 33% comorbidity) were included. Microbiological, toxicological, and metabolic testing was performed in 93%, 34%, and 32% of cases. In 95% a computed tomography scan or magnetic resonance imaging was done and in 62% an autopsy was performed. The cause of death was explained in 58% of cases and a plausible cause was identified in an additional 13%. Most children died from infectious diseases. Noninfectious cardiac causes were the second leading cause of death found. Modifiable factors were identified in 24% of non-sudden infant death syndrome/unclassified sudden infant death cases and mostly involved overlooked alarming symptoms. Conclusions: The PESUDY procedure is valuable and effective for determining the cause of death in children with sudden unexplained deaths and for providing answers to grieving parents and involved health care professionals.</p

    The Achilles heel of decision making system in termites

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    Mitochondrial beta-oxidation of long-chain fatty acids requires the concerted action of three tightly integrated membrane-bound enzymes (carnitine palmitoyltransferase I and II and carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase) that transport them into mitochondria. Neonatal onset of carnitine palmitoyltransferase II (CPT II) deficiency is an autosomal recessive, often lethal disorder of this transport. We describe a novel splice-site mutation in the CPT II gene, found in a Moroccan family, of which four out of five children have died from the neonatal form of CPT II deficiency. Mutation detection studies at the mRNA level in the CPT II gene implied that the affected children were homozygous for the previously reported 534T insertion followed by a 25-bp deletion (encompassing bases 534-558). Studies of genomic DNA, however, revealed all patients to be compound heterozygous for this 534T ins/del 25 mutation, and for a new g-->a splice-site mutation in the splice-acceptor site of intron 2. Because of these findings, prenatal diagnosis was performed in chorionic villi of three new pregnancies. This did not reveal new compound heterozygous genotypes, and, after uneventful pregnancies, all children appeared to be healthy. The new mutation is the first splice-site mutation ever identified in CPT II deficiency. The fact that it was not discovered in the patient's cDNA makes this study another example of the incompleteness of mutation detection at the mRNA level in cases where a mutation leads to aberrant splicing or nonsense-mediated messenger deca

    Cellular and clinical impact of Haploinsufficiency for genes involved in ATR signaling

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    Ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) protein, a kinase that regulates a DNA damage-response pathway, is mutated in ATR-Seckel syndrome (ATR-SS), a disorder characterized by severe microcephaly and growth delay. Impaired ATR signaling is also observed in cell lines from additional disorders characterized by microcephaly and growth delay, including non-ATR-SS, Nijmegen breakage syndrome, and MCPH1 (microcephaly, primary autosomal recessive, 1)-dependent primary microcephaly. Here, we examined ATR-pathway function in cell lines from three haploinsufficient contiguous gene-deletion disorders--a subset of blepharophimosis-ptosis-epicanthus inversus syndrome, Miller-Dieker lissencephaly syndrome, and Williams-Beuren syndrome--in which the deleted region encompasses ATR, RPA1, and RFC2, respectively. These three genes function in ATR signaling. Cell lines from these disorders displayed an impaired ATR-dependent DNA damage response. Thus, we describe ATR signaling as a pathway unusually sensitive to haploinsufficiency and identify three further human disorders displaying a defective ATR-dependent DNA damage response. The striking correlation of ATR-pathway dysfunction with the presence of microcephaly and growth delay strongly suggests a causal relationship

    A Systematic Approach to Evaluate Sudden Unexplained Death in Children

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    Objective: To evaluate in the Netherlands the national outcomes in providing cause of and insights into sudden and unexplained child deaths among children via the Postmortem Evaluation of Sudden Unexplained Death in Youth (PESUDY) procedure. Study design: Children aged 0-18 years in the Netherlands who died suddenly were included in the PESUDY procedure if their death was unexplained and their parents gave consent. The PESUDY procedure consists of pediatric and forensic examination, biochemical, and microbiological tests; radiologic imaging; autopsy; and multidisciplinary discussion. Data on history, modifiable factors, previous symptoms, performed diagnostics, and cause of death were collected between October 2016 and December 2021. Results: In total, 212 cases (median age 11 months, 56% boys, 33% comorbidity) were included. Microbiological, toxicological, and metabolic testing was performed in 93%, 34%, and 32% of cases. In 95% a computed tomography scan or magnetic resonance imaging was done and in 62% an autopsy was performed. The cause of death was explained in 58% of cases and a plausible cause was identified in an additional 13%. Most children died from infectious diseases. Noninfectious cardiac causes were the second leading cause of death found. Modifiable factors were identified in 24% of non-sudden infant death syndrome/unclassified sudden infant death cases and mostly involved overlooked alarming symptoms. Conclusions: The PESUDY procedure is valuable and effective for determining the cause of death in children with sudden unexplained deaths and for providing answers to grieving parents and involved health care professionals

    Surveillance study of apparent life-threatening events (ALTE) in the Netherlands

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    SIDS and ALTE are different entities that somehow show some similarities. Both constitute heterogeneous conditions. The Netherlands is a low-incidence country for SIDS. To study whether the same would hold for ALTE, we studied the incidence, etiology, and current treatment of ALTE in The Netherlands. Using the Dutch Pediatric Surveillance Unit, pediatricians working in second- and third-level hospitals in the Netherlands were asked to report any case of ALTE presented in their hospital from January 2002 to January 2003. A questionnaire was subsequently sent to collect personal data, data on pregnancy and birth, condition preceding the incident, the incident itself, condition after the incident, investigations performed, monitoring or treatment initiated during admission, any diagnosis made at discharge, and treatment or parental support offered after discharge. A total of 115 cases of ALTE were reported, of which 110 questionnaires were filled in and returned (response rate 97%). Based on the national birth rate of 200,000, the incidence of ALTE amounted 0.58/1,000 live born infants. No deaths occurred. Clinical diagnoses could be assessed in 58.2%. Most frequent diagnoses were (percentages of the total of 110 cases) gastro-esophageal reflux and respiratory tract infection (37.3% and 8.2%, respectively); main symptoms were change of color and muscle tone, choking, and gagging. The differences in diagnoses are heterogeneous. In 34%, parents shook their infants, which is alarmingly high. Pre- and postmature infants were overrepresented in this survey (29.5% and 8.2%, respectively). Ten percent had recurrent ALTE. In total, 15.5% of the infants were discharged with a home monitor. In conclusion, ALTE has a low incidence in second- and third-level hospitals in the Netherlands. Parents should be systematically informed about the possible devastating effects of shaking an infant. Careful history taking and targeted additional investigations are of utmost importance

    Muscle rigidity following administration of fentanyl to a mechanically ventilated newborn infant

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    Contains fulltext : 22543___.PDF (publisher's version ) (Open Access

    Voorschrijven van geneesmiddelen aan kinderen: een vak apart

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    Contains fulltext : 25220___.PDF (publisher's version ) (Open Access
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