New approach to the diagnosis of growth hormone deficiency in adults. Eur J Endocrinol 1996;134:352-6. Pyridostigmine (PD), a muscarinic cholinergic agonist, and arginine (ARG) clearly increase the growth hormone (GH) response to growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH)
Growth hormone secretagogues (GHSs) are synthetic peptidyl and nonpeptidyl molecules with strong, dose-dependent, and reproducible growth hormone (GH)-releasing activity even after oral administration. GHSs release GH via actions on specific receptors (GHS-R) at the pituitary and, mainly, at the hypothalamic levels. GHSs likely act as functional somatostatin antagonists and meantime enhance the activity of GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)-secreting neurons. The GH-releasing effect of GHSs is independent of gender but undergoes marked age-related variations. Estrogens play a major role in enhancing the GH response to GHSs at puberty, which GHRH hypoactivity, somatostatinergic hyperactivity and impaired activity of the putative GHS-like ligand and receptors probably explain the reduced GH-releasing effect of GHSs in aging. The activity of GHSs is not fully specific for GH. Their slight prolactin-releasing activity probably comes from direct pituitary action. In physiological conditions, the ACTH-releasing activity of GHSs is dependent on central actions; a direct action on GHS-R in pituitary ACTH-secreting tumors likely explains the peculiar ACTH and cortisol hyperresponsiveness to GHSs in Cushing disease. GHSs have specific receptor subtypes in other central and peripheral endocrine and nonendocrine tissues mediating GH-independent biologic activities. GHSs influence sleep pattern, stimulate food intake, and have cardiovascular activities. GHs have specific binding in normal and neoplastic follicular derived human thyroid tissue and inhibit the proliferation of follicular-derived neoplastic cell lines. The discovery of ghrelin, a 28 amino acid peptide synthesized in the stomach but also in other tissues, has opened new fascinating perspectives of research in this field.
This study demonstrates that anorexia nervosa, a clinical condition of ghrelin hypersecretion, shows a specific reduction in the GH response to ghrelin, despite the hyper-responsiveness to GHRH administration. The impaired GH response to ghrelin in anorexia nervosa agrees with previous evidence of blunted GH response to synthetic GH secretagogues and could reflect desensitization of the GHS receptor induced by the chronic elevation of ghrelin levels in this pathological state.
To clarify the impairment of the GH/IGF-I axis in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), in 13 adult male patients with OSAS (OSA) as well as 15 weight-matched patients with simple obesity (OB) and 10 normal lean male subjects (NS), we studied: 1) the GH response to GHRH (1 micro g/kg iv) plus arginine (30 g iv); and 2) the IGF-I and IGF binding protein-3 responses to a very low dose recombinant human (rh)GH treatment (5.0 microg/kg sc per day for 4 d). The GH response to arginine plus GHRH in OSA was lower than in OB (P < 0.05), which in turn was lower than in NS (P < 0.001). Basal IGF-I levels in OSA were lower than in OB (P < 0.05), which in turn were lower than in NS (P < 0.03). As opposed to OB and NS, in OSA a very low rhGH dose did not affect IGF-I. Adjusting for age and basal values, rhGH-induced IGF-I rise in OSA was lower than in OB (P < 0.01). IGF binding protein-3, glucose, and insulin levels in the three groups were not modified by rhGH. OSA show a more marked impairment of the maximal secretory capacity of somatotroph cells together with reduced IGF-I sensitivity to rhGH stimulation. These findings suggest that OSAS is connoted by a concomitant impairment of GH secretion and sensitivity.
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