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Deteriorating Diabetes Control during Adolescence: Physiological or Psychosocial?

  • J. Hamilton, and D. Daneman,
Published/Copyright: February 1, 2002

Published Online: 2002-02

©2011 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.

Articles in the same Issue

  1. TABLE OF CONTENTS
  2. EDITORIAL
  3. Deteriorating Diabetes Control during Adolescence: Physiological or Psychosocial?
  4. How Should the Short Stature of Girls with Turner's Syndrome be Treated?
  5. Favorable Final Height Outcome in Girls with Ullrich-Turner Syndrome Treated with Low-Dose Growth Hormone Together with Oxandrolone Despite Starting Treatment After 10 Years of Age
  6. SHOX Intragenic Microsatellite Analysis in Patients with Short Stature
  7. Auxological Computer Based Network for Early Detection of Disorders of Growth and Weight Attainment
  8. Microadenomas of the Pituitary Gland in Children With and Without Hypophyseal Dysfunction in Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  9. Pamidronate Treatment of Osteogenesis Imperfecta - Lack of Correlation Between Clinical Severity, Age at Onset of Treatment, Predicted Collagen Mutation and Treatment Response
  10. The Relationship between Clinical Severity of Noonan's Syndrome and Growth, Growth Hormone (GH) Secretion and Response to GH Treatment
  11. Cardiac Mass and Function, Carotid Artery Intima-Media Thickness and Lipoprotein (a) Levels in Children and Adolescents with Type I Diabetes Mellitus of Short Duration
  12. Bone Mineral Density and Body Composition and Influencing Factors in Children with Rheumatic Diseases Treated with Corticosteroids
  13. Tumor Necrosis Factor-α Levels in Short Children
  14. Reference Values for Morning Salivary Cortisol Concentrations in Healthy School-aged Children
  15. Impaired Glucose Homeostasis in Young Adult Thalassemic Patients: A Pilot Study with Acarbose
  16. An Activating Mutation of the Thyrotropin Receptor Gene in Hereditary Non-Autoimmune Hyperthyroidism
  17. Growth Hormone Therapy May Increase Fracture Risk in a Pubertal Patient with Osteogenesis Imperfecta
  18. Hypogonadotrophic Hypogonadism Associated with Prelingual Deafness due to a Connexin 26 Gene Mutation
  19. BOOK REVIEWS. CALENDAR
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