Hyperinsulinism: Molecular aetiology of focal disease

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Abstract

Persistent hypoglycaemia in infancy is most commonly caused by hyperinsulinism. A case is reported of the somatic loss of the maternal 11p in an insulin secreting focal adenoma in association with a germline SUR-1 mutation on the paternal allele in a baby boy with hyperinsulinism diagnosed at 49 days old. A reduction to homozygosity of an SUR-1 mutation is proposed as a critical part of the cause of focal hyperinsulinism.

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APA

Ryan, F., Devaney, D., Joyce, C., Nestorowicz, A., Permutt, M. A., Glaser, B., … Thornton, P. S. (1998). Hyperinsulinism: Molecular aetiology of focal disease. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 79(5), 445–447. https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.79.5.445

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