ACROMEGALY - EFFECTS OF VARIOUS STEROID HORMONES ON INSULIN-INDUCED GROWTH HORMONE RESPONSE
- 1 January 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 104 (1) , 1-+
Abstract
The availability of a sensitive assay for human growth hormone has made it possible to directly measure the effects of various agents purported to alter growth patterns. Acromegalic patients present a special problem both in early diagnosis and in therapy. Being able to measure growth hormone in these patients provides an accurate index of activity and a precise measure of therapeutic effectiveness. In an attempt to determine whether a pituitary block of growth hormone secretion is feasible in this condition, a study was made of the effects of estrogen, androgen and glucocorticoid administration on growth hormone response to a standard insulin tolerance test in a patient with active acromegaly. In the dosage schedules used in this study, it was not possible to suppress either basal growth hormone secretion or blunt its responsiveness to the normal physiologic stimulus of hypoglycemia.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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