Startseite Medizin Hypothalamic obesity after treatment for craniopharyngioma: the importance of the home environment
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Hypothalamic obesity after treatment for craniopharyngioma: the importance of the home environment

  • Ruud W.H. Meijneke , Antoinette Y.N. Schouten-van Meeteren , Nienke Y. de Boer , Suzanne van Zundert , Paul A.S. van Trotsenburg , Femke Stoelinga und Hanneke M. van Santen EMAIL logo
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 6. November 2014

Abstract

Hypothalamic obesity after treatment for craniopharyngioma is a well-recognized, severe problem. Treatment of hypothalamic obesity is difficult and often frustrating for the patient, the parents and the professional care-giver. Because hypothalamic obesity is caused by an underlying medical disorder, it is often assumed that regular diet and exercise are not beneficial to reduce the extraordinarily high body mass index, and in fact, lifestyle interventions have been shown to be insufficient in case of extreme hypothalamic obesity. Nevertheless, it is important to realize that also in this situation, informal care delivered by the family and appropriate parenting styles are required to minimize the obesity problem. We present a case in which weight gain in the home situation was considered unstoppable, and a very early mortality due to complications of the severe increasing obesity was considered inevitable. A permissive approach toward food intake became leading with rapid weight increase since a restrictive lifestyle was considered a senseless burden for the child. By admission to our hospital for a longer period of time, weight reduction was realized, and the merely permissive approach could be changed into active purposeful care by adequate information, instruction, guidance and encouragement of the affected child and her parents. This case illustrates that, although this type of obesity has a pathological origin, parental and environmental influences remain of extreme importance.


Corresponding author: Dr. Hanneke M. van Santen, Department of Pediatric Endocrinology, Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital/University Medical Center Utrecht, Lundlaan 5, Huispostnummer KC.03.063.0, Postbus 85090∣3508 AB Utrecht, The Netherlands, Phone: +31 (0)88 75 54339, Fax: +31 (0)88 7555350, E-mail:

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Received: 2014-8-8
Accepted: 2014-9-29
Published Online: 2014-11-6
Published in Print: 2015-1-1

©2015 by De Gruyter

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Frontmatter
  2. Highlight: Childhood Craniopharyngioma
  3. Selected papers from the 3rd International Multidisciplinary Postgraduate Course, April 24–27, 2014
  4. Childhood craniopharyngioma – current status and recent perspectives in diagnostics and treatment
  5. The importance of interdisciplinary communication with patients about complex, chronic illnesses: our experiences as parents of a child with a craniopharyngioma
  6. Adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma: pathology, molecular genetics and mouse models
  7. Endocrine aspects and sequel in patients with craniopharyngioma
  8. Surgery for pediatric craniopharyngiomas: is less more?
  9. Eating behavior, weight problems and eating disorders in 101 long-term survivors of childhood-onset craniopharyngioma
  10. Carbohydrate-lipid profile and use of metformin with micronized fenofibrate in reducing metabolic consequences of craniopharyngioma treatment in children: single institution experience
  11. Effects of T3 treatment on brown adipose tissue and energy expenditure in a patient with craniopharyngioma and hypothalamic obesity
  12. Hypothalamic obesity after treatment for craniopharyngioma: the importance of the home environment
  13. Review article
  14. Association study of TAC3 and TACR3 gene polymorphisms with idiopathic precocious puberty in Chinese girls
  15. Images in pediatric endocrinology
  16. Intestinal invagination in diabetic ketoacidosis: case report
  17. Original articles
  18. Managing incidental findings and disclosure of results in a paediatric research cohort – the LIFE Child Study cohort
  19. The heterogeneity of hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia in 19 patients with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome due to KvDMR1 hypomethylation
  20. Gender differences and age-related changes in body fat mass in Tibetan children and teenagers: an analysis by the bioelectrical impedance method
  21. A study of genes involved in adipocyte differentiation
  22. Initiation of growth hormone therapy in idiopathic short stature: do gender differences exist?
  23. The influence of puberty on vitamin D status in obese children and the possible relation between vitamin D deficiency and insulin resistance
  24. Growth failure associated with early neglect: pilot comparison of neglected US children and international adoptees
  25. Effect of growth hormone deficiency on brain MRI findings among children with growth restrictions
  26. Variability of lipid and lipoprotein concentrations during puberty in Brazilian boys
  27. Skin advanced glycation endproducts are elevated at onset of type 1 diabetes in youth
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  38. Thyroid disease in Chinese girls with Turner syndrome
  39. Patient reports
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  41. Hypophosphatemic rickets caused by a novel splice donor site mutation and activation of two cryptic splice donor sites in the PHEX gene
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  45. Needle detachment from the Sure-T® infusion set in two young children with diabetes mellitus (DM) treated with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) and unexplained hyperglycaemia
  46. Familial dysalbuminemic hyperthyroxinemia in a 4-year-old girl with hyperactivity, palpitations and advanced dental age: how gold standard assays may be misleading
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