Rate of change (modulation) of serum growth hormone concentrations is a more important factor in determining growth rate than duration of exposure
Rate of change (modulation) of serum growth hormone concentrations is a more important factor in determining growth rate than duration of exposure
objective To determine whether duration of exposure to GH and/or rate of change of serum GH concentration are Important factors In determining the growth rate of short children design An analysis of parameters of occupancy percentage and rate of change of serum GH concentration was performed as part of a prospective study Investigating the relationship between growth and GH In childhood patients Sixty‐four short prepubertal children (48 male, 16 female) aged between 4·7 and 11·9 years were studied. Thirty‐one children were growing with a height velocity standard deviation score between 0 and – 0·8 and were defined as short normal. Thirty‐three children were growing with a height velocity standard deviation score less than – 0·8 and were defined as short slowly growing measurements Twenty‐four hour serum GH concentration profiles were constructed by withdrawing samples at 20‐minute intervals. Analysis of occupancy percentage was performed on each data array by determining cumulative distributions and plotting these as linear problts against log serum GH concentration. Estimates of peak (OC45), Intermediate (OC50) and trough (OC5) occupancies were calculated. A first‐order derivative of the concentration‐time data array was determined for each profile as a measure of rate changes. results First‐order derivative values were significantly greater In the short normal group than In the short slowly growing children (short normal median 1·41 mU/l/min; short slowly growing median 0·72 mU/l/min; P > 0·001). OC56 values were significantly higher in the short normal group (median 19·31 mU/l) than the short slowly growing group (median 7·69 mU/l) (P > 0·001). There was no difference In OC50 values. OC5 values were lower In short normal children (median 0·20 mU/l) than in the short slowly growing children (0·55 mU/l) (P > 0·003). The most Important factor In determining growth rate was the rate of change In serum GH concentration (FOD). Occupancy percentage played no part In the relationship. The regression equation was Height velocity SDS = 1·16 (In FOD) – 1·03; r= 0·75; P > 0·001 conclusions These data suggest that the pattern of presentation of GH In the circulation Is an Important factor in determining target organ response. Although occupancy percentages at differing serum GH concentrations differ between short slowly growing and short normal children, it Is the rate of change of the hormone in the circulation which appears to be the more Important ‘signal’ In terms of modulating growth
165-170
Hlndmarsh, P. C.
415918c8-f0ed-45f7-a9a2-e13c7c18db42
Matthews, D. R.
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Stratton, I.
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Prfngle, P. J.
4bc490b1-0a78-4b24-911a-1c1952550f00
Brook, C. G.D.
fc95c257-c3fd-4f62-820c-a451ea00f8af
February 1992
Hlndmarsh, P. C.
415918c8-f0ed-45f7-a9a2-e13c7c18db42
Matthews, D. R.
ba1a878d-6510-45c5-896c-d4ade423caca
Stratton, I.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Prfngle, P. J.
4bc490b1-0a78-4b24-911a-1c1952550f00
Brook, C. G.D.
fc95c257-c3fd-4f62-820c-a451ea00f8af
Hlndmarsh, P. C., Matthews, D. R., Stratton, I., Prfngle, P. J. and Brook, C. G.D.
(1992)
Rate of change (modulation) of serum growth hormone concentrations is a more important factor in determining growth rate than duration of exposure.
Clinical Endocrinology, 36 (2), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1365-2265.1992.tb00952.x).
Abstract
objective To determine whether duration of exposure to GH and/or rate of change of serum GH concentration are Important factors In determining the growth rate of short children design An analysis of parameters of occupancy percentage and rate of change of serum GH concentration was performed as part of a prospective study Investigating the relationship between growth and GH In childhood patients Sixty‐four short prepubertal children (48 male, 16 female) aged between 4·7 and 11·9 years were studied. Thirty‐one children were growing with a height velocity standard deviation score between 0 and – 0·8 and were defined as short normal. Thirty‐three children were growing with a height velocity standard deviation score less than – 0·8 and were defined as short slowly growing measurements Twenty‐four hour serum GH concentration profiles were constructed by withdrawing samples at 20‐minute intervals. Analysis of occupancy percentage was performed on each data array by determining cumulative distributions and plotting these as linear problts against log serum GH concentration. Estimates of peak (OC45), Intermediate (OC50) and trough (OC5) occupancies were calculated. A first‐order derivative of the concentration‐time data array was determined for each profile as a measure of rate changes. results First‐order derivative values were significantly greater In the short normal group than In the short slowly growing children (short normal median 1·41 mU/l/min; short slowly growing median 0·72 mU/l/min; P > 0·001). OC56 values were significantly higher in the short normal group (median 19·31 mU/l) than the short slowly growing group (median 7·69 mU/l) (P > 0·001). There was no difference In OC50 values. OC5 values were lower In short normal children (median 0·20 mU/l) than in the short slowly growing children (0·55 mU/l) (P > 0·003). The most Important factor In determining growth rate was the rate of change In serum GH concentration (FOD). Occupancy percentage played no part In the relationship. The regression equation was Height velocity SDS = 1·16 (In FOD) – 1·03; r= 0·75; P > 0·001 conclusions These data suggest that the pattern of presentation of GH In the circulation Is an Important factor in determining target organ response. Although occupancy percentages at differing serum GH concentrations differ between short slowly growing and short normal children, it Is the rate of change of the hormone in the circulation which appears to be the more Important ‘signal’ In terms of modulating growth
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Published date: February 1992
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Local EPrints ID: 486940
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486940
ISSN: 0300-0664
PURE UUID: 04de47c1-6c5d-478c-ab13-118730902309
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Date deposited: 08 Feb 2024 17:45
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:01
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Author:
P. C. Hlndmarsh
Author:
D. R. Matthews
Author:
I. Stratton
Author:
P. J. Prfngle
Author:
C. G.D. Brook
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