Winter 2007

CARES Foundation, Inc.

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CAH Chat Groups

 
 
Classical Women’s Group: A place for women with classical CAH to talk about the issues that affect them. To join, send an email to http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/classicalwomen/.

Fund Research While You Shop!!!
 

Shop Online at iGive.com and Help Us Find a Cure

CARES Foundation, Inc. is a registered member of iGive. At the mall at www.igive.com you can shop over 600 stores and help CARES at the same time. There is no cost or obligation to join, and a percentage of your purchase is donated to CARES. To Designate CARES as your charity of choice, search the keywords: CARES, CAH or congenital adrenal hyperplasia.

Since 2005, CARES has awarded over $150,000 for research. Please help us keep it up!
 

Shop, Shop, Shop!

 
CAHSisters2: A place for adult women with late-onset CAH. To learn more about this group, go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CAHSISTERS2.
 
CARES Teen Chat Group: A place for teens with CAH to talk about feelings, questions, and life experiences with CAH. To join, go to: http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/caresteenchat1 and click on “Join this Group.”
 
CARES Spanish Group: A Yahoo Group for the Spanish-speaking CAH community. To learn more and join, go to http://mx.groups.yahoo.com/group/hiperplasia/.
 
Greek CAH Groups: Places for Greek speaking families and individuals affected by CAH. To learn more and join, visit http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cahgreece and http://groups.msn.com/cahgreece.
 
 

 

CAH Volunteers Needed for Exercise Study

 

Catecholamine Reserve and Exercise Tolerance in Subjects with Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia

and in Healthy Controls
 

Principal Investigator: Dr. Deborah Merke M.D.Pediatric Endocrinologist and Director of Pediatric Services at the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
 

At the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, we are currently investigating the effects of high-intensity short term exercise over 20 minutes in patients with CAH. Since participation in the study does not confer immediate benefit to the volunteer, CAH participants will be paid $200 upon completion of the study. In order to participate in this study volunteers must:

  • have the non-classic form of CAH (21-hydroxylase deficiency)

  • be between 9-40 years old

  • demonstrate good clinical control defined by: 17-OH-progesterone level between 100 and 1500 ng/dl, plasma renin activity within the normal reference range, growth rate within 2 standard deviations for age, and no new signs or symptoms of virilization in females.

  • not be on other medications besides their CAH-related medications.
     

Travel is paid by the NIH.
 

For more information or to volunteer, please contact Liza Green-Golan at the NIH at (301) 496-0610. 

 

 

CAH Study at the University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill

Karen Jane Loechner, M.D./Ph.D.

We are recruiting children with CAH who are 4-12 years old (bone age <14 years), are still growing, and have not yet started puberty. Children will be enrolled in the study at the General Clinical Research Center at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Although cortisol replacement (hydrocortisone, prednisone, or dexamethasone, for example) and Florinef have virtually eliminated mortality, there are at least two reasons for continuing to try to perfect our treatment regimens: (1) the linear growth of children is suboptimal and the end result is an adult who is too short, and (2) overtreatment with glucocorticoids in children may increase risk of osteoporosis in later years.

Based on studies of the regulation of release of ACTH (that, in turn, drives the production of hormones from the adrenal cortex), we have found that we can decrease the amount of ACTH using calcium channel blockers (medications typically used to treat high blood pressure, such as amlodipine). Amlodipine has been shown to be safe even in infants treated for a variety of medical reasons.

Our hypothesis is that addition of amlodipine will allow us to decrease the amount of glucocorticoid medication that your child is currently taking to control his/her CAH. Such a decrease should translate into better growth and bone strength. This new medication would be added to your child’s current CAH treatment program and evaluated in a double-blind/placebo-controlled crossover study.

For more information, please contact Dr. Karen Loechner at (919) 216-5946 (pager) or (919) 966-4435 ext. 224 (voice mail); fax (919) 966-2423; Roxanne Schock, CDE, Clinical Coordinator at (919) 966-0428 (voice mail). All visits, including laboratory testing, research medication, and parking will be paid for by this protocol. Limited “off-site” testing at your local care provider may be available subject to IRB approval. Travel funds available (please inquire for details).

 

     

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