Myriam Dabbas
University of Paris
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European Journal of Endocrinology | 2012
Dinane Samara-Boustani; Ana Colmenares; Caroline Elie; Myriam Dabbas; Jacques Beltrand; Virgile Caron; Claude Ricour; Paul Jacquin; Nadia Tubiana-Rufi; Claire Levy-Marchal; Christine Delcroix; Delphine Martin; Lila Benadjaoud; Evelyne Jacqz Aigrain; Christine Trivin; Kathleen Laborde; Elisabeth Thibaud; Jean-Jacques Robert; Michel Polak
OBJECTIVES To compare the pubertal development, the hormonal profiles and the prevalence of hirsutism and menstrual disorders in obese adolescent girls and adolescent girls with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). METHODS Data were collected from 96 obese adolescent girls and 78 adolescent girls with T1DM at Tanner stage IV or V, whose ages ranged between 11.9 and 17.9 years. RESULTS High prevalence of hirsutism and menstrual disorder was found in the obese adolescent girls (36.5 and 42% respectively) and the adolescent girls with T1DM (21 and 44% respectively). The obese girls were significantly younger at pubarche, thelarche and menarche than the girls with T1DM. Hirsutism in the obese girls and those with T1DM was associated with hyperandrogenaemia and a raised free androgen index (FAI). When the cause of the raised FAI was investigated in both the groups of girls with hirsutism, the raised FAI in the obese girls was due to low serum sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) levels. In contrast, the raised FAI of the girls with T1DM and hirsutism was due to hyperandrogenaemia. Menstrual disorders in the T1DM girls were associated also with hyperandrogenaemia unlike obese girls. CONCLUSIONS Hirsutism and menstrual disorders are common in obese adolescent girls and adolescent girls with T1DM. Although hyperandrogenaemia is present in both groups of girls, the androgenic profiles of the two groups differ. The hyperandrogenaemia in the obese girls is primarily due to their decreased serum SHBG levels, whereas the hyperandrogenaemia in the girls with T1DM is due to their increased androgen production.
International Journal of Obesity | 2018
Sophie Parat; Véronique Nègre; Amandine Baptiste; P. Valensi; Anne-Marie Bertrand; Christine Chollet; Myriam Dabbas; Jean-Jacques Altman; Alexandre Lapillonne; Jean-Marc Tréluyer; Caroline Elie; Maithé Tauber; Françoise Lorenzini; Emmanuel Cosson
BackgroundWe aimed to evaluate whether pre and perinatal education of pregnant women would reduce childhood overweight.MethodsFour French centers included women at ≤21 gestational weeks (GWs) with body mass index (BMI) >25 kg/m2 before pregnancy. Patients were randomized to a control group (routine care including at least one dietary visit) or an intervention group (2 individuals (26 and 30 GW) and 4 group sessions (21, 28, 35 GW, 2 months postpartum)) aimed at educating the future mother regarding infant and maternal nutrition. The primary objective was to reduce post-natal excessive weight gain in the infant from birth to 2 years (NCT00804765). This project was funded by a grant from the National Programme for Hospital Research (PHRC-2007 French Ministry of Health).ResultsWe included 275 women (BMI: 32.5 kg/m2). The rate of post-natal excessive weight gain was similar in the intervention (n = 132) and control (n = 136) groups by intention to treat (ITT: 59.1% vs 60.3% respectively, p = 0.84) in available data (AD, n = 206) and by per-protocol analysis (PP, n = 177). Two years after delivery, normalization of maternal BMI and number of infants with BMI < 19 kg/m2 were not significantly different in the interventional group in ITT and in the control group. Although not significantly different in ITT, normalization of maternal BMI was more frequent in AD (n = 149: 12.9% vs 3.8%, p = 0.04) and 2-year-old infant BMIs were less likely to be >19 kg/m2 in the intervention group in AD (n = 204: 0% vs 6.8%, p = 0.014) and PP (n = 176: 0% vs 6.4%, p = 0.03).ConclusionsAn education and nutritional counseling program for overweight women, starting after 3 months of gestation, did not significantly change post-natal excessive weight gain of infants or prevent overweight in mothers and children 2 years after delivery.
Psychosomatic Medicine | 2004
Gilbert Vila; Ewa Zipper; Myriam Dabbas; Catherine Bertrand; Jean Jacques Robert; Claude Ricour; Marie Christine Mouren-Simeoni
European Journal of Pediatrics | 2008
Angelo Campanozzi; Myriam Dabbas; Jean Charles Ruiz; Claude Ricour; Olivier Goulet
La psychiatrie de l'enfant | 2009
Benjamin Petrovic; Marion Mecarelli; Myriam Dabbas; Claude Ricour; Bernard Golse; Franck Zigante
Archive | 2015
Myriam Dabbas; Naziha Khen-Dunlop; Filippo Jean Paul De; Pierre Bougnères; Olivier Goulet; Yann Revillon
54th Annual ESPE | 2015
Sophie Parat; Emmanuel Cosson; Amandine Baptiste; Marie-Therese Tauber; Paul Valensi; Anne-Marie Bertrand; Myriam Dabbas; Caroline Elie; Françoise Lorenzini; Véronique Nègre
Psychiatrie De L Enfant | 2009
Benjamin Petrovic; Marion Mecarelli; Myriam Dabbas; Claude Ricour; Bernard Golse; Franck Zigante
La psychiatrie de l’enfant | 2009
Benjamin Petrovic; Marion Mecarelli; Myriam Dabbas; Claude Ricour; Bernard Golse; Franck Zigante
Psychologie clinique et projective | 2008
Karinne Gueniche; Pauline Isaac; Dinane Samara-Boustani; Myriam Dabbas; Virgile Caron; Michel Polak