Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5655014 | Diabetes & Metabolism | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Children with FHD in second-degree relatives on both maternal and paternal sides already have higher C-peptide levels at an early age. This might be the result of a double burden of a shared obesogenic lifestyle, or of more diverse diabetogenic genes compared to children without FHD or with only FHD in one side of the family. In any case, second-degree FHD could be used as a public-health screening tool to identify children at risk of adverse metabolic outcomes and of possible future disease.
Keywords
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Authors
A.J.J.M. Oostvogels, C.P. Landstra, L. Britsemmer, R. Lodewijkx, K. Stronks, T.J. Roseboom, T.G.M. Vrijkotte,