- Pediatric endocrinology
Pediatric
endocrinology (British: Paediatric) is a medical subspecialty dealing with variations of physicalgrowth and sexual development in childhood, as well asdiabetes and other disorders of theendocrine gland s.By age, pediatric endocrinologists care for patients from infancy to late adolescence.
By disease, the most common disease of the specialty is
type 1 diabetes , which usually accounts for at least 50% of a typical clinical practice. The next most common problem is growth disorders, especially those amenable togrowth hormone treatment . Pediatric endocrinologists are usually the primary physicians involved in the medical care of infants and children withintersex disorders. The specialty also deals withhypoglycemia and other forms of hyperglycemia in childhood, variations ofpuberty , as well otheradrenal ,thyroid , andpituitary problems. Many pediatric endocrinologists have interests and expertise in bone metabolism, lipid metabolism, adolescent gynecology, or inborn errors of metabolism.In the United States and Canada, pediatric endocrinology is a subspecialty of the American Board of Pediatrics, with board certification following fellowship training. It is a relatively small and primarily cognitive specialty, with few procedures and an emphasis on diagnostic evaluation.
Most pediatric endocrinologists in North America and many from around the world can trace their professional genealogy to Lawson Wilkins, who pioneered the specialty in the pediatrics department of Johns Hopkins Medical School and the Harriet Lane Home in Baltimore in between the late 1940's and the mid-1960's.
The principal North American professional association is named the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society [http://www.lwpes.org] . Other longstanding pediatric endocrine associations include the European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology, the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology, and the Japanese Society for Pediatric Endocrinology. Professional associations of the specialty continue to proliferate.
Training for pediatric endocrinology consists of a 2-3 year fellowship following completion of a 3 year pediatrics residency. The fellowship, and the specialty, are heavily research-oriented and academically based, although less exclusively now than in past decades.
References
Fisher D. A short history of pediatric endocrinology in North America. Pediatr Research 2004 Apr;55(4):716-26.PMID 14739361
External links
VIDEO [http://videos.med.wisc.edu/videoInfo.php?videoid=1226 Pediatric Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma] presented at the [http://www.hslc.wisc.edu/ UW-Madison Health Sciences Learning Center] by Geoffrey B. Thompson, MD, professor of surgery at Mayo Clinic.
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