Age at onset and long-term metabolic control affect height in type-1 diabetes mellitus
Reduced height as a consequence of type-I-diabetes mellitus in childhood has been reported in many studies. However, it is still debated whether good metabolic control can normalize the growth rate. A total of 436 children (204 boys, 232 girls, mean age at diagnosis of diabetes 8.2+/-0.2 years) were...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of pediatrics 1998-12, Vol.157 (12), p.972 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Reduced height as a consequence of type-I-diabetes mellitus in childhood has been reported in many studies. However, it is still debated whether good metabolic control can normalize the growth rate. A total of 436 children (204 boys, 232 girls, mean age at diagnosis of diabetes 8.2+/-0.2 years) were followed at our outpatient diabetes centre. Z-scores for height were evaluated in relation to duration of diabetes, age at onset and long-term metabolic control. At diagnosis, height in children with diabetes was significantly above the reference population (+0.43+/-0.09). Standardized height decreased during the subsequent course of diabetes. This likely represents a delay of growth, as the final height (chronological age > 18 years, n = 144) was +0.27+/-0.09. Growth reduction was more pronounced in patients diagnosed before the onset of puberty and final height in patients with a prepubertal onset of diabetes was significantly lower (+0.10+/-0.13) compared to patients with a pubertal/postpubertal onset (+0.52+/-0.14). Among patients with a prepubertal onset, the subgroup with "poor" metabolic control (long-term median HbA(Ic) >7%) lost significantly more height compared to patients with "good" metabolic control.
Despite modern treatment regimens, reduced longitudinal growth can still be demonstrated in type-I diabetes. This parameter therefore provides a valuable endpoint for quality control in paediatric diabetology. |
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ISSN: | 0340-6199 1432-1076 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s004310050980 |