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A question of rhythm: recent advances in growth hormone research.
Authors:J Hamilton
Abstract:Research by Dr. Gloria Shaffer Tannenbaum at the McGill University-Montreal Children's Hospital Research Institute has led to the development of a new test to differentiate children who are deficient in growth hormone from those who are short but growing normally. This clinical application is the fruit of Tannenbaum's discovery that growth hormone secretion occurs in a rhythmic pattern regulated by intricate interactions between two neurohormones: growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and somatotropin release-inhibiting factor (SRIF). In the test an analogue of SRIF is used to allow stores of growth hormone to build up. A subsequent challenge with GHRH is then used to identify children with a genuine deficiency. Tannenbaum's research also indicates that there are sexual differences in the pattern of growth hormone release and that growth hormone regulates its own secretion by means of a negative feedback system.
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