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| [February 20, 2013] |
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American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists Publishes Lipodystrophy Consensus Statement
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. --(Business Wire)--
The American
Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) today issued a
consensus statement outlining recommended clinical approaches to the
detection of lipodystrophy (LD), a seemingly rare condition
characterized by complete or partial lack of fat cells which affect the
way the body manages and stores fat as energy.
The consensus statement was developed by a task force of AACE, comprised
of physicians from the NIH and academic centers who are expert
researchers in lipodystrophy, its diagnosis and management, and
physician clinicians who are experts in identifying and managing severe
metabolic conditions in particular diabetes and lipid disorders. The
goal of the statement is to increase awareness of the condition's
presence and improve the clinician's ability in detecting patients at
risk for lipodystrophy. Although recognizing generalized forms of the
condition are more apparent in very young age, select forms of
lipodystrophy, in particular partial LD, may be underdiagnosed. The
consensus provides a clinical framework for identifying people at risk
and provides criteria to help the clinician in the office detect a
patient at risk to refer, as needed, for further workup and therapeutic
management. The statement is featured in Volume 19, Number 1,
January/February 2013 issue of Endocrine Practice, AACE's
peer-reviewed journal.
"As opposed to more common metabolic disorders such as type 2 diabetes
mellitus, lipodystrophy is such an uncommon condition that it is not
unusual for patients to escape diagnosis until late in the course of
their disease," says Yeduha Handelsman, M.D., F.A.C.E., F.A.C.P.,
F.L.N.A., co-chair of the AACE task force and lead author of the
consensus statement. "Thus, our statement examines the various types and
clinical presentations of lipodystrophy to improve detection of the
disease and help the clinician identify people whose lipodystrophy may
not be visually apparent to ensure patients receive appropriate workup
and management."
The symptom that most often leads to a diagnosis in lypodystrophy is the
loss of fat tissue, which can be prominent enough to be instantly
recognizable to a knowledgeable physician. Some forms can be more
subtle, requiring the clinician to consider the presence of the
condition in patients who present with difficult-to-treat metabolic
abnormalities. However, not all patients display these abnormalities
upon examination. Thus, the task force developed a group of core
clinical characteristics and supportive evidence that should alert
clinicians to the possible presence of lipodystrophy.
To review the complete consensus statement, visit https://www.aace.com/files/lipodstrophy-cs.pdf
About the American Association of Clinical
Endocrinologists (AACE)
The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) represents
more than 6,500 endocrinologists in the United States and abroad. AACE
is the largest association of clinical endocrinologists in the world.
The majority of AACE members are certified in Endocrinology and
Metabolism and concentrate on the treatment of patients with endocrine
and metabolic disorders including diabetes, thyroid disorders,
osteoporosis, growth hormone deficiency, cholesterol disorders,
hypertension and obesity. For more information about AACE, visit the
AACE website at www.aace.com,
become a fan on Facebook (News - Alert) at www.facebook.com/theaace or
follow AACE on Twitter (News - Alert) at www.twitter.com/theaace.

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