Most Recent Articles
Managing HI into Adulthood
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The Congenital Hyperinsulinism Center at CHOP has been with your family every step of the way as you’ve treated and managed your child’s HI.
What Are the Chances Our Next Child Will Have HI?
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When a family has a child with congenital hyperinsulinism, a question often arises: Will any future child also have HI?
Meet HI Center’s Newest Team Member: Genetic counselor Victoria Sanders
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CHOP’s Congenital Hyperinsulinism Center, which treats more children with HI than any center in the world, has added a dedicated genetic counselor to its multidisciplinary team.
Congenital Hyperinsulinism and Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome: Alina’s Story
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The partnership between her doctors at The Congenital Hyperinsulinism Center at CHOP and her local medical team in California is keeping Alina healthy and allowing her to be a typical toddler. However, her beginning was anything but typical.
Seizures and HI/HA
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Seizures result from abnormal electrical activity of neurons. There are many types of seizures that generally relate to the locations in the brain in which they occur.
CHOP Researchers Work to Advance Understanding of HI/HA
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The HI/HA research team at CHOP continues to pioneer exciting and impactful research to advance understanding of this disorder.
Hyperinsulinism/hyperammonemia Syndrome: Adam’s Story
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Adam’s hyperinsulinism/hyperammonemia wasn’t well controlled until he came from Chicago to CHOP. Now he’s participating in research to help find a better treatment for HA.
The Protein-Carb Balancing Act
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Children with protein-sensitive hyperinsulinism (HI) will have low blood sugars (hypoglycemia) when they eat protein-rich foods, ensuring they’re getting enough carbs to offset the protein falls to parents and caregivers.
HI Center Gains Status as CHOP Frontier Program
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The Congenial Hyperinsulinism Center Hyperinsulinism is poised to help even more children and families after it was selected as a CHOP Frontier Program.
Diagnosing, Treating Feeding Problems in Hyperinsulinism
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Children with hyperinsulinism are at risk for feeding disorders. But how are parents to distinguish typical hurdles with eating from a true disorder?