About Human Growth Hormone/HGH//Somatropin
HGH - Growth Hormone Sensitivity
Parks JS. Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, Department
of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Ga 30322,
USA.
For many years it was believed that the growth hormone (GH) axis does not play
a role in growth before birth or during the first year after birth.
More recently, however, studies of genetic disorders of growth have
led to developments in our understanding of the onset of GH sensitivity
and the relationships between the maternal and fetal GH axes. Many
children whose GH deficiency (GHD) is diagnosed in late childhood
have a good rate of growth in their first year of life. This can
be explained when one considers the differences between pituitary
and hypothalamic GHD. Many children in whom GHD is diagnosed later
in childhood have hypothalamic GHD, which may be masked in the first
year of life by a relative lack of somatostatin secretion. Genetic
defects in the GH axis lead to a slight degree of growth retardation
at birth, consistent with growth impairment in the third trimester
only. Conversely, a boy with a deletion in the insulin-like growth
factor I (IGF-I) gene showed severe growth retardation at birth,
indicating a role for IGF-I during the second and third trimesters.
From these results, there are two possible models for the relationship
between IGF-I production and other components of the maternal-fetal
GH axis: independence of the IGF-I axis from somatotropic influences
during the second trimester or, alternatively, redundancy of somatotropic
hormones and their receptors. From reports of individuals with naturally
occurring mutations that eliminate contributors to the GH axis,
redundancy does indeed appear to be a feature of the maternal-fetal
GH axis, with GH sensitivity arising around mid-gestation. Copyright
2001 S. Karger AG, Basel |