RESUMEN
Nocturnal enuresis (NE) is a common condition in the pediatric age. NE is defined as an intermittent bedwetting with any frequency while sleeping in children. NE is classified into primary form (patient never had achieved nocturnal urinary control) or secondary form (children with a period of 6 consecutive months of night-time urinary control before incontinence, which is generally associated with organic or psychological causes). Moreover, NE could be monosymptomatic (MNE) or non-monosymptomatic (NMNE), depending on the presence of daytime incontinence or any other lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS). We report a 7-year- old female with a history of recent onset of sphincter troubles and recurrent low urinary tract infections. She presented urinary urgency associated to daytime incontinence, bedwetting almost every night in the previous 3 months and sometimes encopresis. The physical and neurological examination was silent, no psychological or social problem intercurred. As first approach, she was treated with deamino-delta-D-arginine vasopressin (dDAVP) 120 mcg associated with oxybutynin 5 mg and educational therapy, for 3 months without benefits. So, she underwent a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spinal cord, that highlighted the presence of hydrosyringomyelia from D6 to D10, lipoma of the terminal filum and the presence of synovial cyst between L5-S1. This case remarks that in secondary NMNE, any possible organic cause must be investigated.
Asunto(s)
Enuresis Nocturna , Niño , Humanos , Femenino , Enuresis Nocturna/diagnóstico , Enuresis Nocturna/etiología , Enuresis Nocturna/terapia , Examen FísicoRESUMEN
Patients with Noonan syndrome typically have a target height <2 standard deviations compared to the general population, and half of the affected adults remain permanently below the 3rd centile for height, though their short stature might result from a multifactorial etiology, not-yet fully understood. The secretion of growth hormone (GH) following the classic GH stimulation tests is often normal, with baseline insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) levels at the lower normal limits, but patients with Noonan syndrome have also a possible moderate response to GH therapy, leading to a final increased height and substantial improvement in growth rate. Aim of this review was to evaluate both safety and efficacy of GH therapy in children and adolescents with Noonan syndrome, also evaluating as a secondary aim the possible correlations between the underlying genetic mutations and GH responses.