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      Growth hormone and growth factors during perinatal life.

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      Hormone research
      S. Karger AG

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          Abstract

          Pituitary growth hormone (GH) is present in early pregnancy in the fetal circulation. The concentrations are higher than ever found during life, due to an unrestrained, basal secretion. GH receptors develop around midpregnancy, when they are present in low concentrations, and there is a rapid increase during the first months of life. The function of fetal GH - characterized by a nearly complete GH resistance - is largely unclear: there is only a small effect on longitudinal growth, and the regulation of growth factors is independent of GH. Possibly, metabolic effects of GH on fat and glucose metabolism and body composition are of greater importance. During the first months of life, the rapid fetal (GH-independent, nutrition-dependent) growth decelerates, a process that is partly compensated by the onset of GH-dependent longitudinal growth.

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          Most cited references6

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          Intrauterine growth retardation and postnatal growth failure associated with deletion of the insulin-like growth factor I gene.

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            Clinical review 68: The endocrine regulation of fetal growth in late gestation: the role of insulin-like growth factors

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              Spontaneous pulsatile growth hormone release in male and female premature infants

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Horm. Res.
                Hormone research
                S. Karger AG
                0301-0163
                0301-0163
                2000
                : 53 Suppl 1
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Section Pediatric Endocrinology, University Children's Hospital Tübingen, Germany. htwollma@med.uni-tuebingen.de
                Article
                53205
                10.1159/000053205
                10895043
                c605956d-5651-4795-bc4f-087761a4d6a9
                History

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