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Intravenous growth hormone: growth responses to patterned infusions in hypophysectomized rats

Authors :
R. G. Clark
I. C. A. F. Robinson
John-Olov Jansson
Olle Isaksson
Source :
Journal of Endocrinology. 104:53-61
Publication Year :
1985
Publisher :
Bioscientifica, 1985.

Abstract

Young hypophysectomized rats were maintained with chronic indwelling i.v. cannulae attached via swivels to a multichannel pumping system programmed to deliver GH in a continuous or pulsatile pattern for several days. Continuous i.v. infusions of human GH for 5 days produced dose-dependent increases in body weight and tail length, without increasing food intake. A comparison of GH infusions by the s.c. or i.v. route showed that the direct i.v. route was threefold more effective. Pulsatile i.v. infusions of human or bovine GH at two doses (12 or 36 mu./day, eight pulses/day, 5-min duration, every 3 h) produced greater increases in body weight than continuous i.v. infusions of GH at the same daily dose. Continuous infusions of bovine GH produced a lower growth rate in the second of two consecutive 5-day treatment periods, whereas the responses to pulsatile GH did not diminish with time. Both body weight gain and long-bone growth were affected by the frequency of GH pulses; nine pulses per day were more effective than three pulses per day which in turn produced larger growth responses than one pulse per day. Keeping GH pulse frequency constant and varying pulse duration (4, 16 or 64 min) did not affect growth rates. In conclusion, long-term pulsatile i.v. infusions of GH mimic the endogenous secretory pattern, and are most effective when given at the physiologically appropriate pulse frequency. J. Endocr. (1985) 104, 53–61

Details

ISSN :
14796805 and 00220795
Volume :
104
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Endocrinology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d2b253d454e1d10e6a0032f71c20840f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.1040053