Pathophysiology of primary congenital and early-onset non-autoimmune hypothyroidism
Patofyziologie primární vrozené a časné postnatální neautoimunitní hypotyreózy
dissertation thesis (DEFENDED)
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/23976Identifiers
Study Information System: 13858
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- Kvalifikační práce [3196]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Dvořáková, Marcela
Jiskra, Jan
Stárka, Luboslav
Faculty / Institute
Third Faculty of Medicine
Discipline
-
Department
Deparment of Children and Adolescents
Date of defense
4. 6. 2009
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, 3. lékařská fakultaLanguage
English
Grade
Pass
Cílem této rozsáhlé studie bylo zjistit monogenní formy dysgenezi a dyshormonogenezi štítné žlázy v populační kohortě českých pacientů převážně s kongenitální hypoterózou.
Background: Thyroid dysgenesis (TD) and thyroid dyshormonogenesis clinically manifest as permanent primary congenital hypothyroidism (CH) and only rarely as non-congenital, postnatal non-autoimmune hypothyroidism. As basic molecular events underlying the regulation of thyroid development, growth and function were clarified in the last decade, molecular pathogenesis of TD and dyshormonogenesis has been intensively studied. Candidate genes for TD and dyshormonogenesis had been described and their mutations were subsequently detected in several patients with non-syndromic and syndromic CH. Nevertheless, no systematic population-based phenotype-focused molecular genetic analysis had been performed and concerning TD, the data regarded only a few individual patients. Aim: The aim of this extensive study was to identify monogenic forms of TD and dyshormonogenesis in a population-based cohort of Czech patients mostly with CH. Systematic mutation screening was based on a detailed clinical information and phenotype description, and thus focused on clinically defined subgroups of patients matching the phenotypes of already known candidate gene mutations.