The hypophyseal human growth hormone (hGH), a Raben type laboratory preparation, was re-evaluated as regards its innocuity for therapeutic use. Besides the usual control tests recommended by the Romanian Pharmacopoeia, the contamination of the hGH for clinical use with acute and slow viruses, was investigated taking into account the withdrawal of this hormone in many developed countries. The contamination was absent both with acute viruses as resulted from hemadsorption on cell cultures and counterimmunoelectrophoresis, and with slow viruses as observed from a two year-follow up of guinea pigs injected intracerebrally with the hGH preparation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty nine patients with abnormal high basal hGH levels were selected and analysed as a part of a retrospective study of the results of 1,500 insulin stimulation tests (IST), applied in children and adolescents with growth deficiency. Their height, weight, and bone age were lower than their corresponding chronological age. Both in girls and in boys groups, responders and nonresponders subgroups were detected as judging by the results of the secretagogue action of insulin on hGH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOsteocalcin (OC) or the bone protein containing gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (BGP or Gla-P), is a specific and sensitive marker of bone turnover. A radioimmunoassay (RIA) system for human osteocalcin was developed with the sensitivity of 0.5 ng/ml.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMeasurement of osteocalcin (a bone protein containing gamma-carboxyglutamic acid, GLA-P) in the biological liquids and tissues is of interest for studying the mechanisms of bone diseases. It is also helpful in making a diagnosis and in following up the patients with diseases in which the osseous system is affected. Methods have been worked out for isolation and purification of osteocalcin from bovine and rat femur in order to use the purified substance as a starting material for developing radioimmunoassay (RIA) systems for each of these osteocalcins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanism of bone, calcium, phosphorus and proteins abnormalities observed in hyperthyroidism is rather complex and as yet not wholly understood. Increased serum osteocalcin was recently reported in hyperthyroid patients and its decrease after 4-8 months of treatment. Osteocalcin was measured by RIA in the sera of 211 women and 18 men with thyroid diseases.
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