Author:
Grunt J. A.,Howard C. P.,Daughaday W. H.
Abstract
Abstract. Somatomedin-C (Sm-C) and growth hormone (GH) levels were determined before, during and after human growth hormone (hGH) treatment in 18 children with small-for-date short stature (SDSS), 7 children with significant idiopathic short stature (SISS) and 14 children with hypopituitarism. Data on the acute effects of hGH on Sm-C were compared to growth responses after 6 to 9 months therapy. Eleven of the 25 non-hypopituitary patients with normal basal and stimulated serum GH levels and normal basal Sm-C levels increased their rates of growth more than 3.0 cm/year. This compared with 11 of the 14 children with hypopituitarism who increased their rates of growth by at least 3.0 cm/year when treated with GH. Neither the basal somatomedin levels nor the GH-stimulated somatomedin levels correlated well with subsequent growth in the non-hypopituitary patients. These studies indicate that GH therapy may be effective in treating short stature in children without demonstrable GH deficiency.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
54 articles.
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