A Very Rare Entity of Diabetes Insipidus Associated With Edwards Syndrome

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Date

2013

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Hindawi Ltd

Abstract

Edwards syndrome is the second most commonly seen trisomy. It was first described by John Hamilton Edwards in 1960. Although most cases result in termination or foetal loss, live births have been documented in 5%. Edwards syndrome is characterized by multisystem anomalies, of which holoprosencephaly (HPE) is observed in 4-8% of cases. The clinical findings correspond to the degree of HPE malformation. Convulsions and endocrinopathies are among the severe clinical findings. The most common endocrinopathies are central diabetes insipidus (DI), hypothyroidism, hypocortisolism and growth hormone deficiency. The coexistence of holoproencephaly and DI in Edwards syndrome was discussed under the light of literature.

Description

Demir, Nihat/0000-0003-3287-7221; Bala, Keziban Asli/0000-0001-8755-7714

Keywords

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

WoS Q

N/A

Scopus Q

N/A

Source

Volume

95

Issue

4

Start Page

130

End Page

132
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