Catch-Up Growth Is Associated with Delayed Senescence of the Growth Plate in Rabbits
- 1 November 2001
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Pediatric Research
- Vol. 50 (5) , 618-623
- https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-200111000-00014
Abstract
In mammals, release from growth-inhibiting conditions results in catch-up growth. To explain this phenomenon, we proposed the following model:1) The normal senescent decline in growth plate function depends not on age per se, but on the cumulative number of replications that growth plate chondrocytes have undergone. 2) Conditions that suppress growth plate chondrocyte proliferation therefore slow senescence. 3) After transient growth inhibition, growth plates are thus less senescent and hence show a greater growth rate than expected for age, resulting in catch-up growth. To test this model, we administered dexamethasone to growing rabbits to suppress linear growth. After stopping dexamethasone, catch-up growth occurred. In distal femoral growth plates of untreated controls, we observed a senescent decline in the growth rate and in the heights of the proliferative zone, hypertrophic zone, and total growth plate. During the period of catch-up growth, in the animals previously treated with dexamethasone, the senescent decline in all these variables was delayed. Prior treatment with dexamethasone also delayed epiphyseal fusion. These findings support our model that linear catch-up growth is caused, at least in part, by a delay in growth plate senescence.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- The limited in vitro lifetime of human diploid cell strainsPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Effects of Fasting on the Growth Plate: Systemic and Local MechanismsEndocrinology, 1997
- Relationship between bone growth rate and hypertrophic chondrocyte volume in new zealand white rabbits of varying agesJournal of Orthopaedic Research, 1996
- Cortisone effects on growth, food efficiency, and in vitro growth hormone releaseKidney International, 1991
- Tibial epiphyseal development: A cross‐sectional histologic and histomorphometric study in the New Zealand white rabbitJournal of Orthopaedic Research, 1986
- Longitudinal bone growth of the human femurPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,1977
- Control of Bone Growth in RatsNature, 1971
- Standards from birth to maturity for height, weight, height velocity, and weight velocity: British children, 1965. I.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1966
- Regulation of Growth in Size in MammalsNature, 1963
- Catch-up growth following illness or starvationThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1963