Andrea Kelly1, Randy Tang, Susan Becker, Charles A Stanley. 1. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology/Diabetes, 8416 Main Building, 34th and Civic Center Boulevard, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. kellya@email.chop.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Fasting tests are used to identify the cause of hypoglycemia in children. The purposes of this study were to (1) determine whether growth hormone and cortisol levels obtained at the time of hypoglycemia in such tests can identify children with growth hormone and/or cortisol deficiency and (2) identify potential clinical factors that influence growth hormone and cortisol responses to hypoglycemia. STUDY DESIGN: The design consisted of chart review of all diagnostic fasting tests conducted over a 3-year period (n = 151). A normal growth hormone level was defined as >/=7.5 ng/mL, and a normal cortisol level was defined as >/=18 mug/dL. RESULTS: During the fasting tests, 84 children (median age: 1.3 years [2 days to 14.3 years]), became hypoglycemic, with blood glucose </=50 mg/dL. Diagnoses included normal, ketotic hypoglycemia, hyperinsulinism, fatty acid-oxidation defects, glycogen-storage disease, and late dumping hypoglycemia. A total of 70% had growth hormone and cortisol levels less than the "normal" thresholds regardless of diagnosis. Of various factors (age, diagnosis, fast duration, duration blood glucose level of <60 mg/dL, and blood glucose nadir), only age was positively associated with cortisol, and none were consistently related to growth hormone. CONCLUSIONS: A singe low growth hormone or cortisol value at the time of fasting hypoglycemia has poor specificity for the respective diagnoses of growth hormone deficiency and adrenal insufficiency.
OBJECTIVES: Fasting tests are used to identify the cause of hypoglycemia in children. The purposes of this study were to (1) determine whether growth hormone and cortisol levels obtained at the time of hypoglycemia in such tests can identify children with growth hormone and/or cortisol deficiency and (2) identify potential clinical factors that influence growth hormone and cortisol responses to hypoglycemia. STUDY DESIGN: The design consisted of chart review of all diagnostic fasting tests conducted over a 3-year period (n = 151). A normal growth hormone level was defined as >/=7.5 ng/mL, and a normal cortisol level was defined as >/=18 mug/dL. RESULTS: During the fasting tests, 84 children (median age: 1.3 years [2 days to 14.3 years]), became hypoglycemic, with blood glucose </=50 mg/dL. Diagnoses included normal, ketotic hypoglycemia, hyperinsulinism, fatty acid-oxidation defects, glycogen-storage disease, and late dumping hypoglycemia. A total of 70% had growth hormone and cortisol levels less than the "normal" thresholds regardless of diagnosis. Of various factors (age, diagnosis, fast duration, duration blood glucose level of <60 mg/dL, and blood glucose nadir), only age was positively associated with cortisol, and none were consistently related to growth hormone. CONCLUSIONS: A singe low growth hormone or cortisol value at the time of fasting hypoglycemia has poor specificity for the respective diagnoses of growth hormone deficiency and adrenal insufficiency.
Authors: Shayma Ahmed; Ashraf Soliman; Vincenzo De Sanctis; Fawzia Alyafie; Nada Alaaraj; Noor Hamed; Hamdy A Ali; Abdulla Kamal Journal: Acta Biomed Date: 2021-05-12