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    Results: 1 to 20 of 444

    1.

    Insulin mutation screening in 1,044 patients with diabetes: mutations in the INS gene are a common cause of neonatal diabetes but a rare cause of diabetes diagnosed in childhood or adulthood.

    Edghill EL, Flanagan SE, Patch AM, Boustred C, Parrish A, Shields B, Shepherd MH, Hussain K, Kapoor RR, Malecki M, MacDonald MJ, Støy J, Steiner DF, Philipson LH, Bell GI; Neonatal Diabetes International Collaborative Group, Hattersley AT, Ellard S.

    Diabetes. 2008 Apr;57(4):1034-42. Epub 2007 Dec 27.PMID: 18162506 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    2.

    Heterozygous missense mutations in the insulin gene are linked to permanent diabetes appearing in the neonatal period or in early infancy: a report from the French ND (Neonatal Diabetes) Study Group.

    Polak M, Dechaume A, Cavé H, Nimri R, Crosnier H, Sulmont V, de Kerdanet M, Scharfmann R, Lebenthal Y, Froguel P, Vaxillaire M; French ND (Neonatal Diabetes) Study Group.

    Diabetes. 2008 Apr;57(4):1115-9. Epub 2008 Jan 2.PMID: 18171712 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    3.

    Mutations in the insulin gene can cause MODY and autoantibody-negative type 1 diabetes.

    Molven A, Ringdal M, Nordbø AM, Raeder H, Støy J, Lipkind GM, Steiner DF, Philipson LH, Bergmann I, Aarskog D, Undlien DE, Joner G, Søvik O; Norwegian Childhood Diabetes Study Group, Bell GI, Njølstad PR.

    Diabetes. 2008 Apr;57(4):1131-5. Epub 2008 Jan 11.PMID: 18192540 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    4.

    Mutations in ATP-sensitive K+ channel genes cause transient neonatal diabetes and permanent diabetes in childhood or adulthood.

    Flanagan SE, Patch AM, Mackay DJ, Edghill EL, Gloyn AL, Robinson D, Shield JP, Temple K, Ellard S, Hattersley AT.

    Diabetes. 2007 Jul;56(7):1930-7. Epub 2007 Apr 19. Erratum in: Diabetes. 2008 Feb;57(2):523. PMID: 17446535 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    6.

    Diagnosis and treatment of neonatal diabetes: a United States experience.

    Støy J, Greeley SA, Paz VP, Ye H, Pastore AN, Skowron KB, Lipton RB, Cogen FR, Bell GI, Philipson LH; United States Neonatal Diabetes Working Group.

    Pediatr Diabetes. 2008 Oct;9(5):450-9. Epub 2008 Jul 25.PMID: 18662362 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    7.

    Mutations in KCNJ11, which encodes Kir6.2, are a common cause of diabetes diagnosed in the first 6 months of life, with the phenotype determined by genotype.

    Flanagan SE, Edghill EL, Gloyn AL, Ellard S, Hattersley AT.

    Diabetologia. 2006 Jun;49(6):1190-7. Epub 2006 Apr 12.PMID: 16609879 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articles

    8.

    KCNJ11 activating mutations in Italian patients with permanent neonatal diabetes.

    Massa O, Iafusco D, D'Amato E, Gloyn AL, Hattersley AT, Pasquino B, Tonini G, Dammacco F, Zanette G, Meschi F, Porzio O, Bottazzo G, Crinó A, Lorini R, Cerutti F, Vanelli M, Barbetti F; Early Onset Diabetes Study Group of the Italian Society of Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetology.

    Hum Mutat. 2005 Jan;25(1):22-7.PMID: 15580558 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articles

    9.

    The C42R mutation in the Kir6.2 (KCNJ11) gene as a cause of transient neonatal diabetes, childhood diabetes, or later-onset, apparently type 2 diabetes mellitus.

    Yorifuji T, Nagashima K, Kurokawa K, Kawai M, Oishi M, Akazawa Y, Hosokawa M, Yamada Y, Inagaki N, Nakahata T.

    J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2005 Jun;90(6):3174-8. Epub 2005 Mar 22.PMID: 15784703 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    10.

    Activating mutations in the KCNJ11 gene encoding the ATP-sensitive K+ channel subunit Kir6.2 are rare in clinically defined type 1 diabetes diagnosed before 2 years.

    Edghill EL, Gloyn AL, Gillespie KM, Lambert AP, Raymond NT, Swift PG, Ellard S, Gale EA, Hattersley AT.

    Diabetes. 2004 Nov;53(11):2998-3001.PMID: 15504982 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    11.

    Insulin gene mutations as cause of diabetes in children negative for five type 1 diabetes autoantibodies.

    Bonfanti R, Colombo C, Nocerino V, Massa O, Lampasona V, Iafusco D, Viscardi M, Chiumello G, Meschi F, Barbetti F.

    Diabetes Care. 2009 Jan;32(1):123-5. Epub 2008 Oct 7.PMID: 18840770 [PubMed - in process]Related articlesFree article

    12.

    Activating mutations in the gene encoding the ATP-sensitive potassium-channel subunit Kir6.2 and permanent neonatal diabetes.

    Gloyn AL, Pearson ER, Antcliff JF, Proks P, Bruining GJ, Slingerland AS, Howard N, Srinivasan S, Silva JM, Molnes J, Edghill EL, Frayling TM, Temple IK, Mackay D, Shield JP, Sumnik Z, van Rhijn A, Wales JK, Clark P, Gorman S, Aisenberg J, Ellard S, Njølstad PR, Ashcroft FM, Hattersley AT.

    N Engl J Med. 2004 Apr 29;350(18):1838-49. Erratum in: N Engl J Med. 2004 Sep 30;351(14):1470. PMID: 15115830 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    13.

    Prevalence of permanent neonatal diabetes in Slovakia and successful replacement of insulin with sulfonylurea therapy in KCNJ11 and ABCC8 mutation carriers.

    Stanik J, Gasperikova D, Paskova M, Barak L, Javorkova J, Jancova E, Ciljakova M, Hlava P, Michalek J, Flanagan SE, Pearson E, Hattersley AT, Ellard S, Klimes I.

    J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2007 Apr;92(4):1276-82. Epub 2007 Jan 9.PMID: 17213273 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    14.

    Monogenic diabetes mellitus in youth. The MODY syndromes.

    Winter WE, Nakamura M, House DV.

    Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am. 1999 Dec;28(4):765-85. Review.PMID: 10609119 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articles

    15.

    Mutations in the ABCC8 gene encoding the SUR1 subunit of the KATP channel cause transient neonatal diabetes, permanent neonatal diabetes or permanent diabetes diagnosed outside the neonatal period.

    Patch AM, Flanagan SE, Boustred C, Hattersley AT, Ellard S.

    Diabetes Obes Metab. 2007 Nov;9 Suppl 2:28-39.PMID: 17919176 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articles

    16.

    The majority of cases of neonatal diabetes in Spain can be explained by known genetic abnormalities.

    Rica I, Luzuriaga C, Pérez de Nanclares G, Estalella I, Aragonés A, Barrio R, Bilbao JR, Carlés C, Fernández C, Fernández JM, Fernández-Rebollo E, Gastaldo E, Giralt P, Gomez Vida JM, Gutiérrez A, López Siguero JP, Martínez-Aedo MJ, Muñoz M, Prieto J, Rodrigo J, Vargas F, Castano L.

    Diabet Med. 2007 Jul;24(7):707-13. Epub 2007 May 8.PMID: 17490422 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articles

    17.

    Variable phenotypic spectrum of diabetes mellitus in a family carrying a novel KCNJ11 gene mutation.

    D'Amato E, Tammaro P, Craig TJ, Tosi A, Giorgetti R, Lorini R, Ashcroft FM.

    Diabet Med. 2008 Jun;25(6):651-6.PMID: 18544102 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articles

    18.

    Permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus due to a C96Y heterozygous mutation in the insulin gene. A case report.

    Ahamed A, Unnikrishnan AG, Pendsey SS, Nampoothiri S, Bhavani N, Praveen VP, Kumar H, Jayakumar RV, Nair V, Ellard S, Edghill EL.

    JOP. 2008 Nov 3;9(6):715-8.PMID: 18981553 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

    19.

    Mutations in the ABCC8 (SUR1 subunit of the K(ATP) channel) gene are associated with a variable clinical phenotype.

    Klupa T, Kowalska I, Wyka K, Skupien J, Patch AM, Flanagan SE, Noczynska A, Arciszewska M, Ellard S, Hattersley AT, Sieradzki J, Mlynarski W, Malecki MT.

    Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 2009 Sep;71(3):358-62. Epub 2008 Nov 18.PMID: 19021632 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articles

    20.

    Sulfonylurea therapy in two Korean patients with insulin-treated neonatal diabetes due to heterozygous mutations of the KCNJ11 gene encoding Kir6.2.

    Kim MS, Kim SY, Kim GH, Yoo HW, Lee DW, Lee DY.

    J Korean Med Sci. 2007 Aug;22(4):616-20.PMID: 17728498 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]Related articlesFree article

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