Hypoglycemia and Infants of Diabetic Mothers
HYPOGLYCEMIA Print Section Listen BACKGROUND Glucose is the preferred oxidative energy source for the central nervous system. At birth, the sudden loss of a continuous maternal glucose supply requires a…
HYPOGLYCEMIA Print Section Listen BACKGROUND Glucose is the preferred oxidative energy source for the central nervous system. At birth, the sudden loss of a continuous maternal glucose supply requires a…
BACKGROUND Print Section Listen The majority of full-term newborns have an uneventful postnatal course. Once the newborn transitions from the intrauterine to extrauterine environment, management centers on routine care and…
BACKGROUND Print Section Listen In order for a normal transition from fetal to newborn physiology to occur, a complicated and well-orchestrated sequence of physiologic changes must transpire. While the majority…
BACKGROUND Print Section Listen Renal tubular acidosis (RTA) refers to a collection of renal transport defects in the reabsorption of bicarbonate or the secretion of hydrogen ion, or both, resulting…
BACKGROUND Print Section Listen Nephrotic syndrome is one of the most common renal diseases in childhood. In recent estimates, idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, the most common type, occurs in about 16…
BACKGROUND Print Section Listen Respiratory distress occurs frequently in newborns and can be a presenting symptom of both benign and life-threatening diseases. Failure of any of a complex series of…
BACKGROUND Print Section Listen Renal venous thrombosis (RVT) is a condition in which a thrombus forms in the venous drainage system of one or both kidneys. The thrombus can extend…
BACKGROUND Print Section Listen Interstitial nephritis was first described histologically in 1898 in the kidneys of patients who died from diphtheria and scarlet fever.1 Interstitial nephritis is characterized by histologic…