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Growth hormone, insulin-like growth factor-I and its binding proteins in the follow-up of acromegaly.

Abstract:
Elevated growth hormone is a cardinal feature of acromegaly from the biological view point. Growth hormone stimulates IGF-I secretion and that of its major binding protein IGFBP-3. In these circumstances, where hyperinsulinaemia is present, IGFBP-1 levels, which are inversely related to insulin, are suppressed. Failure of suppression of growth hormone after oral glucose (> 2 mU/l (1 microgram/l) is the cardinal biochemical feature of acromegaly. IGF-I values at diagnosis are almost invariably raised. There is some overlap in the value of basal IGFBP-3 between normal subjects and acromegalics. For monitoring purposes, growth hormone values, either basal or during the day are useful. There is overlap in the values of IGF-I and IGFBP-3 between normal subjects and patients on treatment. Prognosis in acromegaly is determined by persistent elevation of growth hormone levels above 5 mU/l (2.5 micrograms/ l). More data are required for the prognostic use of IGF-I.

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Journal:
Journal of endocrinology More from this journal
Volume:
155 Suppl 1
Pages:
S17-S21
Publication date:
1997-10-01
EISSN:
1479-6805
ISSN:
0022-0795


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:18510
UUID:
uuid:f172cea7-062e-4e37-89d0-80dd8e03721a
Local pid:
pubs:18510
Source identifiers:
18510
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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