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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) manifest growth failure which may antecede abdominal symptoms by some years. Eight of ten children with documented IBD had records of decreasing growth velocities. Investigation of growth hormone reserves showed excessive rather than impaired responses. Mean basal GH level was 6.2 +/- 0.75 (SEM) ng/ml. During sleep, the mean GH level rose to 26.0 +/- 4.7 ng/ml and following propranolol-
glucagon
stimulation, to 46.0 +/- 4.5 ng/ml. All values were significantly higher than levels obtained in a control population of 25 children investigated for short stature who were not GH deficient. The mean peak GH response following insulin in the IBD group (10.8 +/- 3.8 ng/ml), however, did not differ from the mean peak response in the control group (13.5 +/- 3.3 ng/ml).
Growth failure
in patients with IBD is not the result of GH deficiency and is not an irreversible phenomenon. On the contrary, judicious use of glucocorticoids aimed at the control of the disease usually produces compensatory growth acceleration ("catch-up growth").
...
PMID:Basal and stimulated serum growth hormone concentrations in inflammatory bowel disease. 1 69
Growth failure
and anterior pituitary dysfunction are clinical features of the CHARGE and VATER associations. This study investigated pituitary dysfunction as a potential cause of poor growth in a series of four and three patients with the CHARGE and VATER associations, respectively, who had height standard deviation scores (SDS) less than-2. Five of the seven patients had associated subnormal growth velocity SDS. Patients were investigated with a combination of dynamic and basal endocrine tests. All patients were found to be normonatraemic and to have normal basal thyrotroph and stimulated corticotroph function. The one peripubertal patient had evidence of biochemical gonadotroph dysfunction. Although two patients had marginally low stimulated serum growth hormone responses to
glucagon
stimulation testing, this was associated with either normal growth velocity or normal serum insulin-like growth factor binding protein 3 (IGFBP-3) concentrations. Thus, somatotroph dysfunction could not be demonstrated unequivocally in any patient. Poor childhood linear growth in the CHARGE and VATER associations does not appear to be associated with pituitary dysfunction.
...
PMID:Growth failure and pituitary function in CHARGE and VATER associations. 1032 34
Although paediatric Cushing's disease is rare, it is associated with severe morbidity in childhood and presents a major diagnostic and therapeutic challenge for the paediatric endocrinologist.
Growth failure
remains an important feature of paediatric Cushing's disease, both at diagnosis and after successful treatment. However, the development of specific diagnostic tests and important therapeutic advances has contributed significantly to the current management. Transsphenoidal pituitary surgery (TSS) is now accepted as first-line therapy for both adult and paediatric Cushing's disease, offering the best opportunity for cure while preserving normal pituitary function. The cure rate following TSS in our centre is currently 62%; therefore, a significant proportion of children following TSS will remain uncured. Our favoured second-line therapy is pituitary radiotherapy, which is effective, rapid and appears to spare anterior pituitary function, with the exception of GH secretion.
Growth failure
was a symptom at diagnosis in 74% of patients; mean height SDS -1.81 (-0.28 to -4.17) compared with mean BMI SDS 2.29 (1.72-5.06). Height velocity (HV) was also subnormal; range 0.9-3.8 cm/yr. Chronic hypercortisolaemia suppresses linear growth and a history of symptoms for >2 years was obtained in 72% of our paediatric patients with Cushing's disease. In our series, 9 out of 10 patients did not demonstrate catch-up growth 0.64 years after TSS or pituitary radiotherapy and peak serum GH level to
glucagon
/ITT stimulation was 0.5-20.9 mU/l. Assessment of GH secretion over a period of 6 to 108 months after cure of paediatric Cushing's disease suggests that impaired GH secretion may persist into adult life. Investigation of possible GHD is performed in our unit in all post-cure patients who do not show optimal catch-up growth. If GH secretion is subnormal, GH replacement is started early and continued until final height, when GH secretion is reassessed. In our series of 10 patients, 9 received GH therapy, combined in 3 with a GnRH analogue to arrest puberty. The results of this treatment were satisfactory with mean height deficit compared with target height improving significantly from mean -1.72 +/- 1.26 SDS at diagnosis to -0.93 +/- 1.13 SDS (p=0.005) at final height or latest assessment, indicating that a favourable final height can be achieved.
...
PMID:Growth and growth hormone secretion in paediatric Cushing's disease. 1700 7