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1.
Chinese Journal of Applied Clinical Pediatrics ; (24): 1648-1650, 2021.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-908032

ABSTRACT

Objective:To summarize clinical features, diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of children with pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1 (PHA1) and review relevant literatures to improve the understanding of the disease and reduce misdiagnosis.Methods:Six children with the main performance of salt losing treated in the Shanghai Children′s Hospital from January 2015 to December 2018, who were diagnosed as PHA1 after relevant auxiliary examinations and genetic tests.They were classified and analyzed for their treatment courses and follow-up prognosis.Results:Six children with PHA1 had varying degrees of salt losing, dehydration and infection.After the examination, 3 cases with urinary system malformations were diagnosed as secondary PHA1.Genetic testing of 2 cases revealed 2 hete-rozygous mutations c. 1439+ 1G>C and c. 875+ 1G>A in the intron region of the SCNN1A gene, and they were diagnosed as multiple target organ defect/systemic PHA1 according to American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics(ACMG) guidelines.The other case failed to be examined by genetic testing due to the refusal of parents, and was finally diagnosed as renal PHA1 according to clinical diagnosis and treatment.Conclusions:PHA1 is a rare cause of infant salt-losing syndrome, renal and secondary PHA1 children can recover quickly after sodium supplementation and the secondary factors are removed; while multiple target organ defect/systemic PHA1 has severe clinical manifestations, electrolyte imbalance is not easy to correct, and fatal arrhythmia is prone to occur, the mortality rate is high.It is easy to be misdiagnosed in clinical practice.Auxiliary examination and genetic testing can help to diagnose and classify PHA1, as well as individualized treatment.

2.
Arch. argent. pediatr ; 109(5): 91-96, sept.-oct. 2011. ilus, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-633202

ABSTRACT

El seudohipoaldosteronismo de tipo 1 es un síndrome infrecuente de resistencia a la aldosterona que se manifiesta con pérdida salina, hiponatremia, hiperpotasemia, acidosis metabólica hiperclorémica e hiperaldosteronismo hiperreninémico. El síndrome puede ser genético; secundario a uropatías e infección urinaria entre otras causas o presentarse esporádicamente. La pérdida salina puede ser sistémica y grave o localizada a nivel renal, por lo general, con mejor pronóstico. El cuadro clínico se manifiesta predominantemente en los primeros siete meses de vida; un marcado retraso pondoestatural y vómitos recurrentes suelen ser los signos clínicos habituales, rara vez se presenta como una emergencia hidroelectrolítica en forma de shock hipovolémico, arritmias cardíacas hiperpotasémicas y crisis convulsiva por hiponatremia. Se presentan cuatro pacientes que debutaron como una emergencia hidroelectrolítica.


Pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1 is a rare syndrome of resistance to aldosterone manifested by salt wasting, hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, and hiperreninemic hyperaldosteronism. The syndrome may be genetic, secondary to uropathies and urinary tract infection among other causes or it may occur sporadically. The salt wasting may be systemic and severe or localized to the kidney usually with better prognosis. The clinical picture is prevalent in the first seven months of life, failure to thrive and recurrent vomiting are usually the common clinical signs, an electrolyte emergency in the form of hypovolemic shock, hyperkalemic cardiac arrhythmias and hyponatremic seizures is rare. Four patients presenting with an electrolyte emergency are reported.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Pseudohypoaldosteronism/diagnosis , Emergencies , Pseudohypoaldosteronism/complications , Water-Electrolyte Imbalance/etiology
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