19 research outputs found

    Factoid Forensics: Have “more than 40” Australian families abandoned their homes because of wind farm noise?

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    Background Anti wind farm activists repeatedly claim that families said to be adversely affected by noise from wind turbines “abandon” their homes. In Australia, a claim of “more than 40 families” has been made by a prominent anti wind farm activist. Methods Six sources (parliamentary submissions, media reports, an anti wind farm website, wind industry sources, correspondence with known anti wind farm activists, and with three politicians opposed to wind farms) were used to find evidence of home “abandonments”. Results Claims about 12 Australian households permanently (n=10) or periodically (n=2) leaving their homes were found. However, no house appears to have been permanently “abandoned” without sale, as the expression implies. These 12 cases need contextualizing against considerations that several of those involved were either dedicated activists against wind farms from times sometimes pre-dating their construction, were engaged in protracted negotiations for home purchase with wind companies, had pre-existing health problems, grievances with the wind company over employment or had left the area for unrelated reasons of employment elsewhere. Conclusions The statement that “more than 40” houses have been “abandoned” because of wind turbines in Australia is a factoid promoted by wind farm opponents for dramatic, rhetorical impact. Other considerations are often involved in abandonment unrelated to the claims made about wind farm noise

    Obesity treatment for adults, adolescents and children

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    In patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency, adult height is below target height. This may result from growth inhibition by glucocorticoid treatment. Previous studies suggest that glucocorticoids have a dose-dependent negative effect on growth in CAH patients and that this effect is age dependent. This study analyzed the correlation between glucocorticoid dose and growth in these patients. A retrospective study was carried out on growth data from 48 patients with classic salt-wasting 21-hydroxylase deficiency who all had been diagnosed in the first year of life and treated from the moment of diagnosis with glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoids. Analysis of the effect of prescribed glucocorticoid dose on growth was performed in age intervals, by analysis of covariance (ANCOVA). The dependent variables height for age z-score (HAZ), weight for age z-score (WAZ) (both corrected for secular trend), and weight for height z-score (WHZ), at 10 selected ages (1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, and 18 yr) were explained by 1) mean daily glucocorticoid dose per body surface in the preceding age interval; 2) HAZ, WAZ, or WHZ value at the beginning of the age interval; 3) HAZ, WAZ, or WHZ value 1 yr before the beginning of the considered age interval; and 4) midparental height (only for HAZ). ANCOVA showed that the daily glucocorticoid dose had significant negative effects on HAZ between the ages of 6 and 12 months and between the age of 8-10 and 12-14 yr (and a trend toward significance between 10-12 yr). The negative glucocorticoid effect on HAZ in the age interval of 12-14 yr was as large as in the interval between 6 and 12 months of age. Weight and weight for height were not significantly influenced by glucocorticoid dose in any of the age intervals. We conclude that in CAH patients in the first year of life and between the ages of 8 and 14 yr, there is a dose-dependent negative effect of glucocorticoids on linear growth. Therefore, the daily glucocorticoid dose in these periods should be sufficient to avoid androgen excess, but as low as possible to allow optimal linear growth and adult height

    [Congenital adrenal hyperplasia: clinical aspects and neonatal screening]

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    Item does not contain fulltextCongenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is a disorder of adrenal steroid synthesis. In 95% of CAH cases, it is caused by 21-hydroxylase deficiency, leading to cortisol deficiency and (in most cases) aldosterone deficiency. The compensatory increase in ACTH secretion by the pituitary gland leads to stimulation of the adrenal glands and, consequently, overproduction of androgens. The classic form is well known due to the congenital virilisation seen in affected girls. However, the cortisol and aldosterone deficiency is at least equally important in both sexes as it can cause an Addisonian crisis within the first weeks of life. For these reasons, a neonatal CAH screening program has been introduced in the Netherlands. Screening results in earlier detection and treatment. The prevalence of the classic form of the disease is 1:12.000 in the Netherlands. Non-classic 21-hydroxylase deficiency is more frequent, presenting with signs of androgen excess from childhood through to adulthood. Treatment of CAH consists of hormonal replacement and surgical correction in case of congenital virilisation in girls. Long-term treatment results, including height at adulthood, have improved over the last decades. Nevertheless, fertility problems can occur in both sexes

    Het adrenogenitaal syndroom

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    ADAM Report 4 (November 1994)

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    ADAM REPORT # 4, November 1994 1. Features of Registered Agreements 2. The Year in Review 3. Recent Development

    Qualitative validation of a model for coping with acute stress in sport

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    Validation d'un modèle basé sur des stratégies cognitives et comportementales visant a affronter le stress aigu dans les competitions sportives

    Adrenal Crisis: Still a Deadly Event in the 21(st) Century

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    Adrenal crisis is a life-threatening medical emergency, associated with a high mortality unless it is appropriately recognized and early treatment is rendered. Despite it being a treatable condition for almost 70 years, failure of adequate preventive measures or delayed treatment has often led to unnecessary deaths. Gastrointestinal illness is the most common precipitant for an adrenal crisis. Although most patients are educated about "sick day rules," patients, and physicians too, are often reluctant to increase their glucocorticoid doses or switch to parenteral injections, and thereby fail to avert the rapid deterioration of the patients' condition. Therefore, more can be done to prevent an adrenal crisis, as well as to ensure that adequate acute medical care is instituted after a crisis has occurred. There is generally a paucity of studies on adrenal crisis. Hence, we will review the current literature, while also focusing on the incidence, presentation, treatment, prevention strategies, and latest recommendations in terms of steroid dosing in stress situations

    Puberty and fertility in congenital adrenal hyperplasia.

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    Item does not contain fulltextCongenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is a disorder of adrenal steroid synthesis. The symptoms and signs of CAH depend on the degree of enzyme deficiency; severe salt-wasting (SW) form, less severe simple virilizing (SV) form and mild nonclassic (NC) form. In this paper, puberty and fertility in CAH are discussed. The time of onset of puberty and progress of pubertal development is quite normal, except in NC patients (earlier). Also the age of menarche in CAH girls is normal, but it can depend on the level of therapeutic control. In prepuberty, bone age is advanced. In puberty, peak height velocity is normal but occurs at a younger age and can therefore be considered to be low (compared to healthy early maturers). In puberty there seems to be an increased sensitivity for glucocorticoids leading to growth inhibition. All three above factors can play a role in reducing adult height. Subfertility is frequently found in both female and male CAH patients. In females, the pregnancy rate depends on the severity of 21-hydroxylase deficiency (SW<SV<NC). Adrenal progestagens and androgens are the main cause of disturbed ovarian activity. In addition psychosexual problems (e.g. as a result of genital surgery) are an important factor. In males, the main cause of subfertiltiy is the presence of testicular adrenal rest tumors, which are thought to originate from aberrant adrenal tissue and respond to treatment with glucocorticoids. Although in general fertility is not a paediatric item, in CAH most fertility problems have their origins in childhood years. Therefore prevention of subfertility has to be implemented as a treatment goal in paediatric endocrinology from the start of puberty

    Ectopic adrenal rests in congenital adrenal hyperplasia as a cause of androgen excess after adrenalectomy detected by pelvic venous sampling.

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    Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Patients with classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to CYP21 deficiency are treated with supraphysiological doses of glucocorticoids to suppress elevated androgen production. This implies also side effects of high-dose glucocorticoids, possibly leading to iatrogenic Cushing's syndrome. Bilateral adrenalectomy has been suggested as the ultimate therapy in severe cases, when insufficient androgen suppression was obtained despite high glucocorticoid doses. Usually, ACTH levels rise after bilateral adrenalectomy, and this could imply an increased risk for the development of ectopic adrenal rests. In female CAH patients ovarian adrenal rests are not commonly detected by conventional radiological techniques. METHODS: We report the case of an adult female CAH patient who underwent bilateral adrenalectomy in early puberty because of poorly controlled CAH. Results and CONCLUSIONS: Several years after surgery, she developed secondary amenorrhea and hair loss as a result of androgen overproduction in ovarian adrenal rests that appeared to be detectable only by pelvic venous sampling. After unilateral oophorectomy androgen levels normalized

    Normal bone mineral density and lean body mass, but increased fat mass, in young adult patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia.

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    Patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia attributable to 21-hydroxylase deficiency are treated with glucocorticoids. Glucocorticoid administration, even in substitution doses, may cause decreased bone mineral density (BMD) and obesity. The purpose of this study was to determine BMD, lean mass, and fat mass in young adult male (M, n = 15) and female (F, n = 15) patients with 21-hydroxylase deficiency, who had been treated with currently recommended low doses of glucocorticoids. Measurements were performed with dual-x-ray absorptiometry. In addition, calcaneal ultrasound measurements were performed (broadband ultrasound attenuation and speed of sound). Results were compared with those in age- and sex-matched controls; to adjust for height, lean and fat mass were divided by (height)(2). M and F patients [M, 21.7 +/- 2.4; F, 20.6 +/- 2.9 yr old (mean +/- SD)] were shorter than the controls (M, P < 0.001; F, P < 0.003) and their body mass indices were higher [M patients (25.0 +/- 3.6) vs. controls (22.3 +/- 1.9 kg/m(2)) (P < 0.02); F patients (25.5 +/- 4.5) vs. controls (21.9 +/- 2.3 kg/m(2)) (P < 0.02)]. BMD values (lumbar spine L1-L4, femoral neck, and total body) were not different from controls. Calcaneal ultrasound measurements showed that M patients had higher speed of sound values [M patients (1564 +/- 38) vs. controls (1529 +/- 29 m/sec) (P < 0.01)]. Lean mass in M and F patients was not different from controls when adjusted for height. Fat mass was higher in M and F patients when adjusted for height [M patients 5.6 +/- 2.9 vs. controls 2.7 median (1.7-7.0 min-max) kg/m(2) (P < 0.04); F patients 8.7 +/- 2.8 vs. controls 5.8 (4.3-10.7) kg/m(2) (P < 0.02)]. Relative fat mass (fat mass as a percentage of the total body mass) was higher in patients, compared with controls [M patients 22.0 +/- 9.1 vs. controls 12.8 (8.5-27.0)% (P < 0.04); F patients 34.1 +/- 5.0 vs. controls 29.0 +/- 5.1% (P < 0.02)]; this resulted from increased fat mass, not from decreased lean mass. Fat distribution over the body was not different in patients and controls. No significant correlations were found between cumulative glucocorticoid doses in the last 0.5, 2, or 5 yr or mean salivary morning levels of 17-hydroxyprogesterone and androstenedione in the last 5 yr on one hand and bone parameters, lean mass, or fat mass on the other hand. We conclude that, at prevailing low-dose glucocorticoid regimens, young adult patients with 21-hydroxylase deficiency have normal BMD. Their lean mass is in accordance with height, but fat mass is increased, with a normal distribution over the body. This results in a higher fat percentage of the total body and a higher body mass index than in healthy peers. Because overweight and increased fat mass are associated with the metabolic syndrome and increased cardiovascular risk, weight management should have appropriate attention in the follow-up of congenital adrenal hyperplasia patients, to prevent overweight-associated morbidity
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