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Volume 4

Journal of Pediatric Care

ISSN: 2471-805X

Page 50

JOINT EVENT

August 06-07, 2018 Madrid, Spain

&

2

nd

Edition of International Conference on

Adolescent Health & Medicine

18

th

International Conference on

Pediatrics Health

Pediatrics Health 2018

&

Adolescent Health 2018

August 06-07, 2018

Prevalence of overweight and growth retardation and related factors in children with Type-1 diabetes

mellitus

Farzaneh Rohani

Iran University of Medical Sciences, Iran

Aim

: Diabetes mellitus type one is recognized by inadequate insulin secretion, so absence of anabolic effects of insulin lead

to low weight. Insulin therapy, decrease in physical activity to avoid hypoglycemia and changes diet and life style are probable

causes of overweight and obesity in these patients. Here we tried to estimate prevalence of obesity, overweight and growth

retardation in a population of diabetes mellitus, and also some related factors.

Method:

Ninety patients with stable T1D aged 2–18 years with no history of recent infection were included. Written informed

Consents were taken from the parents before enrollment. Variables were age, gender, weight and height percentile, body

mass index, thyroid status, blood pressure, HbA1C, serum creatinine, 24 hours urine albumin and GFR, compared against of

overweight and growth retardation, using appropriate statistical approach.

Results:

Among 90 patients, 1.1% had BMI of higher than 30, 6.6% between 29.9 and 25, 40% between 24.9 and 18.5 and

52% less than 18.49 kg/m2. Height percentile had mean and standard deviation of 45.3(30.3) ranging 3 to 99th percentile,

weight percentile had mean and standard deviation of 42.5(15.8), ranging 14 to 98 percentile. Height percentile had significant

negative correlation with duration of diabetes, age and plasma creatinine. Weight percentile had significant positive correlation

with age, duration of diabetes, plasma creatinine and urine albumin and negative with GFR. Body mass index was positively

correlated with age and plasma creatinine. Height percentile also was associated with systolic blood pressure, while weight

percentile and body mass index, and were associated with thyroid status, puberty stages, both systolic and diastolic blood

pressure.

Conclusion:

Only40% of diabetic patients had normal body mass index. While more than half of them were underweight,

6.6% had overweight. Height and weight for age and sex, presented as percentiles, were normal in all patients.

dr_rohani@yahoo.com

J Pediatr Care 2018, Volume 4

DOI: 10.21767/2471-805X-C3-012