450 research outputs found
Probiotics: a possible role in treatment of adult and pediatric non alcoholic fatty liver disease.
The Authors correctly pointed outthat, based on preliminary experiments on differentNAFLD animal models and different bacterial strainsof probiotics, it would be expected that interventionswhich modulate intestinal microbiota may bebeneficial also in human obesity related liver dys-function. In this regard they mentioned the twonon-randomized pilot studie
Fatty liver disease and hypertransaminasemia hiding the association of clinically silent Duchenne muscular dystrophy and hereditary fructose intolerance
We report a case with the association of well self-compensated hereditary fructose intolerance and still poorly symptomatic Duchenne type muscular dystrophy. This case illustrates the problems of a correct diagnosis in sub-clinical patients presenting with “cryptogenic” hypertransaminasemia
Obesity and obesity related diseases, sugar consumption and bad oral health: a fatal epidemic mixture. The pediatric and odontologist point of view
Obesity and dental caries are increasingly widespread
pathologies. The former is growing so rapidly that the
WHO classified its trend as an “epidemic”. Both are
triggered by a number of well known common etiologic
factors sharing also the high added sugar amount since
childhood. Because of its fermentation and pH lowering,
dietary sugar allows the cariogenic bacteria to damage the
tooth enamel provoking the carious lesions.
WHO guidelines recommend reducing sugar intake to
10% of the total daily energy need, and highlight that
there is evidence which suggests cuttingthis value down to
5% at least. The American guidelines addressing
paediatric age put the limit to 25gr a day with a total ban
on sugar in those aged 2 or less
Management of chronic hepatitis B in childhood: ESPGHAN clinical practice guidelines: Consensus of an expert panel on behalf of the European Society of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition
More than 360 million persons worldwide (6% of the world population) are chronically infected by the hepatitis B Virus (HBV). Although the incidence of HBV infection has dramatically declined since the implementation of universal immunization programs in several countries and blood-donor screening, a significant number of children are still infected each year, often developing chronic infection and requiring appropriate followup [1]. Despite a rather benign course of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) during childhood and adolescence, 3-5% and 0.01-0.03% of chronic carriers develop cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), respectively, before adulthood [2,3]. Such a risk for HCC rises to 9-24% when considering the whole lifetime, with an incidence of cirrhosis of 2-3% per year [4,5]. Worldwide universal vaccination remains the goal for eliminating HBV infection and its complications. Treatment of CHB in childhood has been hampered by the chronic delay in licensing new drugs for pediatric use. Safe and effective antiviral therapies are available in adults, but few are labeled for the use in children, and an accurate selection of whom to treat and the identification of the right timing for treatment are needed to optimize response and reduce the risk of antiviral resistance. Although several guidelines on the management of adult patients with CHB have been published by major international societies, the clinical approach to infected children is still evolving, and is mostly based on consensus of expert opinion [6-9]
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