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1.
Ten acromegalic patients were treated with the somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 (SMS) for 3-38 weeks in various doses and by different administration routines (thrice daily or multiple sc injection). Plasma GH daily profiles, plasma IGF-I, urinary GH, serum TSH, IRI and fasting blood glucose (FBG) concentrations were measured before and during SMS treatment. Plasma GH rapidly decreased within one hour in all patients and was suppressed for at least 4 h after a 50 micrograms sc injection of SMS in 8 patients. Multiple injections of 300-600 micrograms/day SMS (25-50 micrograms X 12) suppressed GH throughout the day. Plasma IGF-I was completely normalized in 4 patients, and, in all but one of the others, decreased markedly. Urinary GH decreased within the first week of treatment in all patients and normalization was obtained in 3 patients. Shrinkage of the pituitary tumor, as determined by CT or MRI, was observed in 7 of 9 patients. Other clinical improvements, such as diminution or complete disappearance of swelling of soft tissues, excessive perspiration, and headache, were observed in 7 of 8 patients. Changes in serum TSH, IRI and FBG were seen in 3-4 patients, but without any apparent clinical problems. In conclusion, SMS is a useful clinical tool for treatment of acromegaly, and a multiple sc injection method seems to be preferable.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of a new long-acting somatostatin analog SMS 201-995 (SMS) on hormonal mechanisms controlling the glucose metabolism was tested in 8 type I diabetics over a 3-day period. In addition to dietary measures and conventional insulin therapy, the patients received a subcutaneous dose of 50 micrograms SMS three times daily for 3 days. Serum growth hormone (GH) was measured at various intervals throughout the investigational period. Glucagon, somatomedin C (SM-C), triiodothyronine, thyroxine, luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and prolactin (PRL) were also determined before and at the end of the therapy with SMS. Basal GH and plasma SM-C had decreased significantly (p less than 0.05 and p less than 0.01, respectively) by the 3rd day. In all cases the insulin requirements could be reduced (mean 28%) without deterioration of the metabolic control. Moreover, blood glucose profiles showed a tendency to lower postprandial peaks after SMS treatment. Glucagon, triiodothyronine, thyroxine, LH, FSH and PRL showed no significant changes. No side effects or alterations in laboratory chemistries were recorded. Dampening of glucose oscillations and counterregulatory mechanisms, and reduction of insulin dosage by SMS may enable a better control of unstable diabetes. Its slow plasma clearance and long action compared to the native peptide will warrant the use of this analog as a additive to standard diabetes therapy in more prolonged trials.  相似文献   

3.
The beneficial effects of long acting somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 in an acromegalic patient affected by severe diabetes mellitus are reported. Neither human insulin alone nor human insulin plus bromocriptine allowed satisfactory metabolic control though, with the latter treatment, virtually normal plasma GH levels were reached. Conversely, addition of SMS 201-995 to insulin treatment led to normalization of blood glucose. This result was obtained with a dose of SMS 201-995 of 400 micrograms/day and only after 3 weeks of therapy.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the effects of insulin and somatomedin-C/insulinlike growth factor I(Sm-C) in purified porcine Leydig cells in vitro on gonadotrophins (hCG) receptor number, hCG responsiveness (cAMP and testosterone production), and thymidine incorporation into DNA. Leydig cells cultured in a serum-free medium containing transferrin, vitamin E, and insulin (5 micrograms/ml) maintained fairly constant both hCG receptors and hCG responsiveness. When they were cultured for 3 days in the same medium without insulin, there was a dramatic decline (more than 80%) in both hCG receptor number and hCG responsiveness. However the cAMP but not the testosterone response to forskolin was normal. Both insulin and Sm-C at nanomolar concentrations prevent the decline of both hCG receptors and hCG-induced cAMP production. This effect of both peptides was dose dependent with an ED50 of about 1 ng/ml and 5 ng/ml for SM-C and insulin, respectively. Insulin and Sm-C had no additive effect on these parameters. At nanomolar concentrations, Sm-C and insulin enhanced hCG-induced testosterone production but the effect of Sm-C was significantly higher than that of insulin. However, the effect of insulin at higher concentrations (5 micrograms/ml) was significantly higher than that of Sm-C at 50 ng/ml. In contrast, at nanomolar concentrations only Sm-C stimulated [3H]-thymidine incorporation into DNA and cell multiplication, the stimulatory effect of insulin on these parameters, was seen only at micromolar concentrations. These results indicate that both Sm-C and insulin acting through their own receptors increase Leydig cell steroidogenic responsiveness to hCG by increasing hCG receptor number and improving some step beyond cAMP formation. In contrast, the mitogenic effects of insulin are mediated only through Sm-C receptors.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of a long-acting somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 on GH secretion was investigated. Eleven acromegalic patients received a single dose of 50 micrograms SMS 201-995 administered subcutaneously, and plasma GH, IGF-I, GRF, TSH, IRI and blood glucose were determined at regular intervals. Nine of 11 patients had elevated basal plasma GH levels above 5 ng/ml. In all patients, plasma GH levels fell immediately from 39.5 +/- 17.3 ng/ml (mean +/- SEM) to 4.3 +/- 1.6 ng/ml (P less than 0.05) with a maximal inhibition of 82.9 +/- 3.3% of the basal levels and the suppression persisted for about 6 h of the observation period. IGF-I and GRF levels were not apparently altered. TSH and IRI levels also rapidly fell. Blood glucose levels fell slightly by 0.5 h. Ten of 11 patients had pain at injection sites. Except for this, no side effects were observed. Our results show that the new somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 may inhibit GH hypersecretion in acromegalic patients for significant periods, suggesting that this agent can be a useful clinical tool for the treatment of acromegaly.  相似文献   

6.
Ten acromegalics received daily doses of 200-300 micrograms of a long-acting somatostatin analog, SMS 201-995 (Sandostatin, SMS), for an average of 64 weeks. Basal mean GH values of 44 +/- (SE) 7.8 ng/ml had fallen into the normal range at the end of the observation period (mean 64 weeks). This effect was accompanied by a substantial drop in somatomedin-C values. Reduction of pituitary tumor size could be documented in 3 of 6 patients. Whereas SMS did not affect high plasma PRL in 4 microprolactinoma patients, lactotrophs turned sensitive to this agent in mixed GH/PRL tumors. In a comparative study between SMS and bromocriptine, the former normalized circulating GH in 10 of 17 acromegalics in an acute trial, whereas bromocriptine was effective in only 5. A combination of both substances was effective in 2 of 3 patients who were insensitive to single drug administration. Cultures of GH-secreting tumor cells showed a statistically significant hormone decrease in the medium when exposed to SMS. However, in some instances, a diminution of the GH contents of the tumor cells was also observed, presumably as the basis for intracellular breakdown and clinical tumor shrinkage.  相似文献   

7.
Cyproheptadine (CPH)--a putative serotonin antagonist--is known to inhibit growth hormone (GH) response to various pharmacological stimuli, as well as during sleep. To elucidate the possible site at which this drug takes effect, we examined plasma GH and somatostatin response to i.v. GHRH1-44 (1 microgram/kg body wt.) before and after CPH treatment in 10 healthy volunteers. The oral administration of CPH (8-12 mg daily for 5 days; total dose 56 mg) significantly curbed GH response to GHRH as expressed in peak plasma GH values (32.0 +/- 6.1 micrograms/l vs. 12.6 +/- 3.2 micrograms/l; P less than 0.01) and in integrated GH response area (2368 +/- 517 micrograms x l-1 x 2 h vs. 744 +/- 172 micrograms x l-1 x 2 h; P less than 0.01). Plasma somatostatin levels did not change in response to GHRH.  相似文献   

8.
G Tolis 《Hormone research》1988,29(2-3):112-114
The present report illustrates the effectiveness of a long-acting somatostatin analog, SMS 201-995 (Sandostatin), in the chronic treatment of acromegaly. Daily doses of 50-300 micrograms were administered subcutaneously to 37 patients. Gradual dose increments induced a progressive GH decrease accompanied by a parallel reduction in plasma somatomedin C concentrations. There was a concomitant amelioration of clinical signs and symptoms throughout the investigational period. No escape phenomenon or tachyphylaxis was observed. It is concluded that chronic therapy with SMS 201-995 represents a promising medical alternative for the treatment of active acromegaly.  相似文献   

9.
This study evaluates the effect of the spontaneous pubertal increase in sex steroids on GH secretion in GH-deficient patients. Fifteen patients (10 boys, 5 girls) with idiopathic isolated GH deficiency diagnosed before puberty (GH peak < 8 micrograms/l after 2 arginine insulin stimulation tests) were reevaluated for their GH secretion using the same test after completion of their hGH therapy and puberty. Their ages at diagnosis and at the last evaluation were 8.2 +/- 0.7 (SE) (range 4.9-14.9) and 17.8 +/- 0.3 years (15-23), respectively. The data at diagnosis and at last evaluation showed that (1) the mean height increased from -4 +/- 0.3 to -2.5 +/- 0.3 SD (p < 0.01), (2) the mean GH peak increased from 4.4 +/- 0.3 (1.6-8) to 7.6 +/- 0.8 micrograms/l (2-13.2, p < 0.01); at the last evaluation, 8/15 patients had GH peak > 8 micrograms/l and (3) the mean plasma insulin-like growth factor I increased from 0.28 +/- 0.05 to 0.42 +/- 0.03 U/ml (n = 6, p < 0.05). The mean increase in the GH peak was 3.2 micrograms/l (-3 to 10.6). It was negatively correlated with the degree of growth retardation at diagnosis (r = -0.74, p < 0.005). We conclude that the increase in the GH peak at puberty in patients with GH deficiency reflects the severity of GH deficiency and that a corrective factor of the cutoff number is necessary for the diagnosis of GH deficiency in puberty.  相似文献   

10.
Biological activities of highly potent octapeptide analogs of somatostatin (SS), D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Trp-NH2 (RC-160) and D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2 (RC-121), were investigated in male rats. When analog RC-160 was administered to rats in which serum growth hormone (GH) levels were elevated by pentobarbital anesthesia, a dose-related inhibition of GH was obtained at dose range of 0.1 to 2.5 micrograms/kg. The time course of GH inhibition by RC-160, RC-121 and SS-14 was studied in rats treated with phenobarbital, morphine and chlorpromazine. Analogs RC-160 and RC-121 induced a prolonged inhibition of GH levels, in contrast to SS-14, whose effect was short-lived. The analogs suppressed the GH level for more than 2 hr, the peak inhibition being seen 30 to 60 min after the injection. The effects of analogs RC-160 and RC-121 on insulin secretion were observed in rats, in which insulin levels had been elevated by intravenous administration of glucose (500 mg/rat). Administration of RC-160 suppressed insulin secretion, dose-dependently, maximum but not complete inhibition being achieved at a dose of 100 micrograms/kg. In this model, RC-160 and RC-121, in doses of 30 micrograms/kg, induced a similar inhibition of insulin release as 200 micrograms/kg of SS-14, whose action of SS-14 was transient. The effect of analog RC-160 on glucagon release was studied in rats with glucagon levels elevated by hypoglycemia. RC-160 suppressed the secretion of glucagon, the inhibition being dose-dependent in the range of 0.1 to 2 micrograms/kg. Doses of 2 and 10 micrograms/kg of this analog completely suppressed the hypoglycemia-induced glucagon release. These results indicate that analogs RC-160 and RC-121 possess prolonged and enhanced biological activities, the former analog showing a high selectivity in inhibiting GH and glucagon release in vivo as compared with that of insulin secretion.  相似文献   

11.
Short children who respond normally to growth hormone (GH) stimulation, but have a subnormal spontaneous secretion of GH (neurosecretory GH dysfunction, NSD) are treated with exogenous GH which might suppress their endogenous GH secretion. The effect of chronic administration of GH (8-24 months) on plasma GH responses to GHRH, clonidine and spontaneous GH secretion were studied in 17 NSD patients. The diagnosis of NSD was based on a normal GH response to clonidine (greater than 10 micrograms/l) and an integrated concentration of (IC-GH) GH less than 3.2 micrograms/l. The GH dose used in this study was 0.25 IU/kg three times a week in 10 patients and 0.05 IU/kg daily in 7 patients. Insulin-like growth factor I levels (nmol) increased significantly on therapy from 9.3 +/- 3.8 to 24.4 +/- 22.4 (p less than 0.001). The GH response (microgram/l) to GHRH was 20.4 +/- 5.5 before treatment and 22.4 +/- 6.2 on GH. Peak GH after clonidine was 22.4 +/- 8.9 and 22.8 +/- 8.1, respectively. There was no significant decrease in the number of GH spontaneous peaks (1.8 +/- 0.7 vs. 2.0 +/- 0.7, respectively) or in the area under the curve. A subcutaneous GH bolus of 0.25 IU/kg in 4 patients resulted in a GH peak of 55-82 micrograms/l at 3-5 h and a gradual return to basal levels at 15-20 h after GH administration. The first spontaneous GH peak appeared 26-28 h after GH injection, peak amplitude was 10-15 micrograms/l.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
We sought to clarify the mechanisms of growth hormone (GH) secretion induced by insulin hypoglycemia, L-dopa, and arginine in man. The secretion of GH as measured by increased plasma level, in response to oral administration of 500 mg L-dopa or 30 min-infusion of arginine, was not modified by prior intravenous administration of 200 micrograms GH-releasing hormone (GHRH). It was, however, completely blocked by preadministered 50 micrograms SMS201-995, a long-acting somatostatin (SRIH) analog. GH release with 200 micrograms GHRH was completely blocked by 100 micrograms SMS201-995. GH secretion caused by insulin-induced hypoglycemia was significantly reduced but still present after administration of 100 micrograms of the analog. These results suggest that a suppression of SRIH release may be partially involved in the stimulatory mechanism of GH secretion by L-dopa. Coadministration of GHRH accentuated the stimulatory effect of arginine on GH secretion. Arginine significantly raised plasma TSH levels. These findings suggest that arginine suppresses SRIH release from the hypothalamus to cause GH secretion because SRIH suppresses TSH secretion. It is also suggested that some factor (or factors) other than GHRH and SRIH are involved in the mechanism by which insulin-induced hypoglycemia stimulates GH secretion, because the effect of insulin was not fully blocked in the presence of SRIH analog. Thus all the tests for GH release appear to act via different mechanisms.  相似文献   

13.
The effect on glucose homeostasis of a transient elevation of plasma growth hormone (GH) and cortisol was studied over 6 h in 14 male patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) by using an i.v. somatostatin (100 micrograms/h) - insulin (0.4 mU/kg/min) glucose (3 mg/kg/min) - infusion test (SIGIT). GH (20 mU/kg) was given as a 60 min i.v. infusion during the initial SIGIT period raising the plasma GH level to about 40 micrograms/l, and returning to low basal within 3 h. ACTH (0.1 mg) was given as an i.v. bolus injection at the start of the SIGIT, resulting in plasma cortisol peak values of about 900 nmol/l within 2-3 h. GH raised blood glucose after a lag of 4 h while ACTH alone had no effect. However, ACTH added to GH enhanced the diabetogenic effect of GH. It is concluded that an episodic increase in circulating GH-cortisol, resembling the responses of these hormones to an insulin-induced hypoglycemia, exerts a diabetogenic effect in IDDM-patients not deprived of insulin. While GH is essential in this respect the diabetogenic effect of cortisol is evident only in conjunction with GH.  相似文献   

14.
Porcine cultured Leydig cells (LC) lose hCG receptors and hCG responsiveness (cAMP and testosterone) when they are cultured for three days in a defined medium without insulin or somatomedin C (Sm-C) (Insulin-like growth factor I). In the presence of insulin (50 ng/ml) or of Sm-C (10 ng/ml) the loss of the hCG receptor number and the decreased cAMP response to hCG were prevented, but the steroidogenic response to hCG was only partially prevented. This parameter became normal when cells were pretreated with either Sm-C (10 ng/ml) plus insulin (50 ng/ml) or with insulin alone at high concentrations (5 micrograms/ml). These results indicate that both Sm-C and insulin acting through their own receptors increase Leydig cell steroidogenic capacity by increasing hCG receptor number and improving some step beyond cAMP formation.  相似文献   

15.
In some acromegalics, GH release can be induced by TRH and/or LHRH administration. The pathogenesis of these GH paradoxical responses was supposed to be a somatotroph-reduced sensitivity to somatostatin, somatotrophin release-inhibiting factor (SRIF), or an hypothalamic derangement of the SRIF release. In this study, this hypothesis was investigated by means of GH suppression during chronic therapy with octreotide [Somatostatin analogue (SMS)] in order to evaluate the possible correlation between GH and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) normalization and the disappearance of these paradoxical responses in 15 acromegalic patients: 15/15 with a paradoxical GH rise after TRH and 7/15 with a paradoxical GH rise after LHRH. SMS therapy was administered subcutaneously at the dose of 150-450 micrograms/day. During the treatment, GH and IGF-1 levels normalized in 12 patients and were reduced in the remaining 3 others. The GH response to TRH disappeared in 7 patients, while the GH response to LHRH disappeared in 4 patients. chi 2 analysis failed to show any significant correlation between GH and IGF-1 normalization and the disappearance of GH response to TRH and LHRH (chi 2 = 0.00686). No linear correlation existed between GH/IGF-1 decrease and GH peak or area under the curve at any time ('r' values: TRH test, GH -0.47, IGF-1 -0.48; LHRH test, GH -0.50, IGF-1 -0.49). The absence of any significant correlation between GH/IGF-1 normalization and the disappearance of GH paradoxical responses during chronic octreotide administration suggests that other factors apart from SRIF sensitivity are involved in the genesis of these responses.  相似文献   

16.
A dose-effect relationship between human growth hormone (GH) releasing factor (hGRF) and GH response was demonstrated for doses ranging from 5 micrograms per subject (minimal active dose) to 40-80 micrograms per subject (minimal dose for maximal effect). Bioactivity of GH released under hGRF was proven in the Nb2 lymphoma cell multiplication assay. Unwanted effects were observed for doses equal to or larger than 150 micrograms. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated from the immunoreactive GRF plasma concentrations obtained after intravenous injections of various doses. The half-lives were 6.8 +/- 0.4 min and 43.2 +/- 3 min for distribution and elimination phases, respectively. Subcutaneous administration of hGRF was shown to be effective for promoting GH release, with doses higher than those required by intravenous administration. Intermittent intravenous injection of hGRF, at 3-hour intervals, resulted in a decrease in the magnitude of GH response in normal subjects.  相似文献   

17.
Z Zadik  U Mira  H Landau 《Hormone research》1992,37(4-5):150-155
The aim of this study was to test the effect of growth hormone (GH) therapy on final height in peripubertal boys with idiopathic short stature in whom a subnormal integrated concentration of GH (< 3.2 micrograms/l) was found. Twenty-eight peripubertal children were studied. Height was below 2 SD for age, growth velocity was < 4.5 cm/year, bone age was more than 2 SD below mean for age and GH response to provocative tests was more than 10 micrograms/l. Eleven subjects (group B) were treated with recombinant GH 0.75 unit/kg/week, divided into 3 weekly doses for 2 years, and then the same weekly dose divided into daily injections was administered until final height was attained. Seventeen untreated children (group A) who were followed until cessation of growth served as controls. The GH-treated patients reached their target heights (-2.1 +/- 0.5, mean +/- SD in SDS) and predicted heights (-1.8 +/- 0.8) determined by the Bayley and Pinneau method, while the final heights of the untreated patients were significantly lower than their target heights and their predicted final heights (-2.7 +/- 0.7, -1.8 +/- 1.0 and -2.7 +/- 0.7, respectively). The main effect of GH was observed during the 1st year of treatment when height velocity was significantly higher in the GH-treated group than in the untreated one (9.3 +/- 2.1 vs. 5.3 +/- 1.1, respectively, p < 0.001). The high cost of the treatment in this specific age group should be weighed against the results.  相似文献   

18.
The GH dependence of somatomedin-C/insulin-like growth factor I (Sm-C/IGF-I) and insulin like growth factor II (IGF-II) mRNAs was investigated by Northern blot hybridizations of polyadenylated RNAs from liver, pancreas, and brain of normal rats, untreated hypophysectomized rats, and hypophysectomized rats 4 h or 8 h after an ip injection of human GH (hGH). Using a 32P-labeled human Sm-C/IGF-I cDNA as probe, four Sm-C/IGF-I mRNAs of 7.5, 4.7, 1.7, and 1.2 kilobases (kb) were detected in rat liver and pancreas but were not detectable in brain. In both liver and pancreas, the abundance of these Sm-C/IGF-I mRNAs was 8- to 10-fold lower in hypophysectomized rats than in normal rats. Within 4 h after injection of hGH into hypophysectomized animals, the abundance of liver and pancreatic Sm-C/IGF-I mRNAs was restored to normal. A human IGF-II cDNA was used as a probe for rat IGF-II mRNAs which were found to be very low in abundance in rat liver and showed no evidence of regulation by GH status. In pancreas, IGF-II mRNA abundance was below the detection limit of the hybridization procedures. The brain contained two IGF-II mRNAs of 4.7 and 3.9 kb that were 5-fold lower in abundance in hypophysectomized rats than in normal rats. These brain IGF-II mRNAs were not, however, restored to normal abundance at 4 or 8 h after ip hGH injection into hypophysectomized animals. To investigate further, the effect of GH status on abundance of Sm-C/IGF-I and IGF-II mRNAs in rat brain, a second experiment was performed that differed from the first in that hypophysectomized rats were given an injection of hGH into the lateral ventricle (intracerebroventricular injection) and a rat Sm-C/IGF-I genomic probe was used to analyze Sm-C/IGF-I mRNAs. In this experiment, a 7.5 kb Sm-C/IGF-I mRNA was detected in brain polyadenylated RNAs. The abundance of the 7.5 kb mRNA was 4-fold lower in hypophysectomized rats than in normal rats and was increased to 80% of normal within 4 h after icv administration of hGH to hypophysectomized animals. As in the first experiment, the abundance of the 4.7 and 3.9 kb brain IGF-II mRNAs was lower than normal in hypophysectomized rats. Brain IGF-II mRNAs were increased to 50% of normal in hypophysectomized rats given an icv injection of hGH but within 8 h after the injection rather than at 4 h as with Sm-C/IGF-I mRNAs.  相似文献   

19.
Four new growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analogs with C-terminal agmatine were compared with the parent human GHRH(1-29)NH2 fragment to assess their abilities to increase serum concentrations of growth hormone (GH) in the bovine. The four analogs were: [D-Ala2, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (JG-73); [desNH2-Tyr1, Ala15, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (MZ-2-51); [desNH2-Tyr1, Ala15, D-Lys21, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (MZ-2-75); and [desNH2-Tyr1, D-Lys12,21, Ala15, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (MZ-2-87). The special characteristic of all four GHRH analogs is that arginine was replaced by agmatine (Agm) in Position 29. Five pregnant Holstein cows received these peptides subcutaneously at the following doses: 0.0156, 0.0625, 0.25, 1, and 4 micrograms/kg body wt. Each cow received each analog-dose combination according to a 5 x 5 Greco-Latin square design repeated for the 5-week treatment. Each cow also received saline vehicle only at the end of the 5-week treatment. Blood samples were collected from 30 min before until 360 min after treatment injection. Total area under the GH response curves for the 6-hr sampling period for each dose of each GHRH analog was compared. There was a linear dose-dependent GH release in response to hGHRH(1-29)NH2 and its four GHRH(1-28)Agm analogs. At the dose of 0.25 micrograms/kg, two GHRH analogs, JG-73 and MZ-2-75, stimulated greater GH release than hGHRH(1-29)NH2 (P less than 0.05). No differences were seen at the two lowest doses, 0.0625 and 0.156 micrograms/kg. When both total area under the GH response curves and GH peak amplitudes for each treatment were averaged for all doses, JG-73 and MZ-2-75 stimulated greater GH release than hGHRH(1-29)NH2 (P less than 0.05). In summary, three GHRH(1-28)Agm analogs, JG-73, MZ-2-75, and MZ-2-51, were found to be 11.8, 11.3, and 6.5 times more potent, respectively, on a weight basis, than hGHRH(1-29)NH2 in stimulating the release of GH in cows.  相似文献   

20.
Estradiol (E2) may enhance somatomedin-C (Sm-C) secretion during puberty in female rhesus monkeys. The present study evaluated the importance of age and acute changes in E2 on Sm-C secretion. Intact (INT) females at their first ovulation (age 3.5 yr; n = 6) had higher levels of Sm-C across the ovulatory cycle than did intact adults (ADT) (n = 5). Levels of Sm-C were similar for both groups during the follicular and luteal phases despite higher follicular phase levels of E2. Young, ovariectomized, E2-treated (E2OVX) females (age 3.5 yr; n = 5; E2 = 50 pg/ml) had higher basal levels of Sm-C than did either age-matched ovariectomized (OVX) females (n = 3), ovariectomized adults (OXA), or E2-treated ovariectomized adults (E2A) (E2 = 100 pg/ml). When ovariectomized groups were given E2 to induce ovulatory increases, no changes in serum Sm-C occurred. Comparisons among age-mates revealed that basal levels of Sm-C were similar between INT and E2OVX, yet these levels were higher than those for OVX. Sm-C levels were similar among all adult groups. Serum growth hormone (GH) was highest in E2OVX, next highest in INT and OVX, and lowest in all adults. Higher Sm-C levels in young animals are, thus, related to these age differences in GH concentrations and are further enhanced by basal levels of E2 and not by acute changes in this steroid. Low Sm-C secretion in adults is associated with low GH levels. Thus, the facilitory effect of basal E2 on Sm-C release is observed during conditions when basal GH levels are elevated, a situation normally limited to adolescence.  相似文献   

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