In an open-label study, 69 children with organic or idiopathic growth hormone deficiency (GHD) were treated with recombinant human growth hormone (Saizen) for an average of 64.4 mo, with treatment periods as long as 140.9 mo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixty-nine growth hormone-deficient patients were treated for 1 year with somatotropin (recombinant DNA-derived human growth hormone) produced in mouse cells. The growth velocity of the 50 patients (72%) in whom the effectiveness of this growth hormone could be evaluated increased from a mean (+/- SD) of 3.5 +/- 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirteen patients with type 1 glycogen-storage disease (GSD-1) were studied to compare the effects on biochemical control and growth of 2 y of therapy with intermittent feedings of uncooked cornstarch (UCS) at the fasting glucose production rate and therapy with continuous overnight glucose (COG) and dextrose feedings during the day. Mean biochemical abnormalities for the groups were minimized but not normalized by either COG or UCS. Growth progressed normally when COG was started by 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Paediatr Scand Suppl
December 1989
Traditional two-dimensional (2-D) growth charts do not distinguish between the effects of a particular pathology or therapy on skeletal maturation and the effects on linear growth. In this study, longitudinal data from two growth studies on children were analysed using a computer technique to produce a growth chart in three dimensions. The three-dimensional (3-D) surface of the graph represents both the linear growth and the skeletal maturation of the patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuppression of gonadal sex steroid secretion in children with central precocious puberty (CPP) by LHRH analogs affords an opportunity to study sex steroid modulation of GH and somatomedin-C (Sm-C) secretion and to examine the role of GH and Sm-C in pubertal and prepubertal statural growth. Nocturnal serum GH and plasma Sm-C levels were measured in 10 preadrenarchal girls [mean age, 3.0 +/- 0.
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