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Growth hormone

Growth hormone (GH) or somatotropin, also known as human growth hormone (hGH or HGH) in its human form, is a peptide hormone that stimulates growth, cell reproduction, and cell regeneration in humans and other animals. It is thus important in human development. GH also stimulates production of Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) and increases the concentration of glucose and free fatty acids.[1][2] It is a type of mitogen which is specific only to the receptors on certain types of cells. GH is a 191-amino acid, single-chain polypeptide that is synthesized, stored and secreted by somatotropic cells within the lateral wings of the anterior pituitary gland.

Growth hormone 1 (pituitary)
Growth hormone
Identifiers
SymbolGH1
NCBI gene2688
HGNC4261
OMIM139250
RefSeqNM_022562
UniProtP01241
Other data
LocusChr. 17 q22-q24
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro
Growth hormone 2 (placental)
Identifiers
SymbolGH2
NCBI gene2689
HGNC4262
OMIM139240
RefSeqNM_002059
UniProtP01242
Other data
LocusChr. 17 q22-q24
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro

A recombinant form of HGH called somatropin (INN) is used as a prescription drug to treat children's growth disorders and adult growth hormone deficiency. In the United States, it is only available legally from pharmacies by prescription from a licensed health care provider. In recent years in the United States, some health care providers are prescribing growth hormone in the elderly to increase vitality. While legal, the efficacy and safety of this use for HGH has not been tested in a clinical trial. Many of the functions of HGH remain unknown.[3]

In its role as an anabolic agent, HGH has been used by competitors in sports since at least 1982 and has been banned by the IOC and NCAA. Traditional urine analysis does not detect doping with HGH, so the ban was not enforced until the early 2000s, when blood tests that could distinguish between natural and artificial HGH were starting to be developed. Blood tests conducted by WADA at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, targeted primarily HGH.[3] Use of the drug for performance enhancement is not currently approved by the FDA.

GH has been studied for use in raising livestock more efficiently in industrial agriculture and several efforts have been made to obtain governmental approval to use GH in livestock production. These uses have been controversial. In the United States, the only FDA-approved use of GH for livestock is the use of a cow-specific form of GH called bovine somatotropin for increasing milk production in dairy cows. Retailers are permitted to label containers of milk as produced with or without bovine somatotropin.

Nomenclature edit

The names somatotropin (STH) or somatotropic hormone refer to the growth hormone produced naturally in animals and extracted from carcasses. Hormone extracted from human cadavers is abbreviated hGH. The main growth hormone produced by recombinant DNA technology has the approved generic name (INN) somatropin and the brand name Humatrope[4] and is properly abbreviated rhGH in the scientific literature. Since its introduction in 1992, Humatrope has been a banned sports doping agent[5] and in this context is referred to as HGH.

The term growth hormone has been incorrectly applied to refer to anabolic sex hormones in the European beef hormone controversy, which initially restricts the use of estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, zeranol, melengestrol acetate and trenbolone acetate.[6]

Biology edit

Gene edit

Genes for human growth hormone, known as growth hormone 1 (somatotropin; pituitary growth hormone) and growth hormone 2 (placental growth hormone; growth hormone variant), are localized in the q22-24 region of chromosome 17[7][8] and are closely related to human chorionic somatomammotropin (also known as placental lactogen) genes. GH, human chorionic somatomammotropin, and prolactin belong to a group of homologous hormones with growth-promoting and lactogenic activity.

Structure edit

The major isoform of the human growth hormone is a protein of 191 amino acids and a molecular weight of 22,124 daltons. The structure includes four helices necessary for functional interaction with the GH receptor. It appears that, in structure, GH is evolutionarily homologous to prolactin and chorionic somatomammotropin. Despite marked structural similarities between growth hormone from different species, only human and Old World monkey growth hormones have significant effects on the human growth hormone receptor.[9]

Several molecular isoforms of GH exist in the pituitary gland and are released to blood. In particular, a variant of approximately 20 kDa originated by an alternative splicing is present in a rather constant 1:9 ratio,[10] while recently an additional variant of ~ 23-24 kDa has also been reported in post-exercise states at higher proportions.[11] This variant has not been identified, but it has been suggested to coincide with a 22 kDa glycosylated variant of 23 kDa identified in the pituitary gland.[12] Furthermore, these variants circulate partially bound to a protein (growth hormone-binding protein, GHBP), which is the truncated part of the growth hormone receptor, and an acid-labile subunit (ALS).

Regulation edit

 
Flowchart showing hormonal regulation of growth

Secretion of growth hormone (GH) in the pituitary is regulated by the neurosecretory nuclei of the hypothalamus. These cells release the peptides growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH or somatocrinin) and growth hormone-inhibiting hormone (GHIH or somatostatin) into the hypophyseal portal venous blood surrounding the pituitary. GH release in the pituitary is primarily determined by the balance of these two peptides, which in turn is affected by many physiological stimulators (e.g., exercise, nutrition, sleep) and inhibitors (e.g., free fatty acids) of GH secretion.[13]

Somatotropic cells in the anterior pituitary gland then synthesize and secrete GH in a pulsatile manner, in response to these stimuli by the hypothalamus. The largest and most predictable of these GH peaks occurs about an hour after onset of sleep with plasma levels of 13 to 72 ng/mL.[14] Maximal secretion of GH may occur within minutes of the onset of slow-wave (SW) sleep (stage III or IV).[15] Otherwise there is wide variation between days and individuals. Nearly fifty percent of GH secretion occurs during the third and fourth NREM sleep stages.[16] Surges of secretion during the day occur at 3- to 5-hour intervals.[3] The plasma concentration of GH during these peaks may range from 5 to even 45 ng/mL.[17] Between the peaks, basal GH levels are low, usually less than 5 ng/mL for most of the day and night.[14] Additional analysis of the pulsatile profile of GH described in all cases less than 1 ng/ml for basal levels while maximum peaks were situated around 10-20 ng/mL.[18][19]

A number of factors are known to affect GH secretion, such as age, sex, diet, exercise, stress, and other hormones.[3] Young adolescents secrete GH at the rate of about 700 μg/day, while healthy adults secrete GH at the rate of about 400 μg/day.[20] Sleep deprivation generally suppresses GH release, particularly after early adulthood.[21]

Stimulators[quantify] of growth hormone (GH) secretion include:

Inhibitors[quantify] of GH secretion include:

In addition to control by endogenous and stimulus processes, a number of foreign compounds (xenobiotics such as drugs and endocrine disruptors) are known to influence GH secretion and function.[38]

Function edit

 
Main pathways in endocrine regulation of growth

Effects of growth hormone on the tissues of the body can generally be described as anabolic (building up). Like most other peptide hormones, GH acts by interacting with a specific receptor on the surface of cells.

Increased height during childhood is the most widely known effect of GH. Height appears to be stimulated by at least two mechanisms:

  1. Because polypeptide hormones are not fat-soluble, they cannot penetrate cell membranes. Thus, GH exerts some of its effects by binding to receptors on target cells, where it activates the MAPK/ERK pathway.[39] Through this mechanism GH directly stimulates division and multiplication of chondrocytes of cartilage.
  2. GH also stimulates, through the JAK-STAT signaling pathway,[39] the production of insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1, formerly known as somatomedin C), a hormone homologous to proinsulin.[40] The liver is a major target organ of GH for this process and is the principal site of IGF-1 production. IGF-1 has growth-stimulating effects on a wide variety of tissues. Additional IGF-1 is generated within target tissues, making it what appears to be both an endocrine and an autocrine/paracrine hormone. IGF-1 also has stimulatory effects on osteoblast and chondrocyte activity to promote bone growth.

In addition to increasing height in children and adolescents, growth hormone has many other effects on the body:

Biochemistry edit

GH has a short biological half-life of about 10 to 20 minutes.[45][46]

Clinical significance edit

Excess edit

The most common disease of GH excess is a pituitary tumor composed of somatotroph cells of the anterior pituitary. These somatotroph adenomas are benign and grow slowly, gradually producing more and more GH. For years, the principal clinical problems are those of GH excess. Eventually, the adenoma may become large enough to cause headaches, impair vision by pressure on the optic nerves, or cause deficiency of other pituitary hormones by displacement.

Prolonged GH excess thickens the bones of the jaw, fingers and toes, resulting in heaviness of the jaw and increased size of digits, referred to as acromegaly. Accompanying problems can include sweating, pressure on nerves (e.g., carpal tunnel syndrome), muscle weakness, excess sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), insulin resistance or even a rare form of type 2 diabetes, and reduced sexual function.

GH-secreting tumors are typically recognized in the fifth decade of life. It is extremely rare for such a tumor to occur in childhood, but, when it does, the excessive GH can cause excessive growth, traditionally referred to as pituitary gigantism.

Surgical removal is the usual treatment for GH-producing tumors. In some circumstances, focused radiation or a GH antagonist such as pegvisomant may be employed to shrink the tumor or block function. Other drugs like octreotide (somatostatin agonist) and bromocriptine (dopamine agonist) can be used to block GH secretion because both somatostatin and dopamine negatively inhibit GHRH-mediated GH release from the anterior pituitary.[47]

Deficiency edit

The effects of growth hormone (GH) deficiency vary depending on the age at which they occur. Alterations in somatomedin can result in growth hormone deficiency with two known mechanisms; failure of tissues to respond to somatomedin, or failure of the liver to produce somatomedin.[48] Major manifestations of GH deficiency in children are growth failure, the development of a short stature, and delayed sexual maturity. In adults, somatomedin alteration contributes to increased osteoclast activity, resulting in weaker bones that are more prone to pathologic fracture and osteoporosis.[48] However, deficiency is rare in adults, with the most common cause being a pituitary adenoma.[49] Other adult causes include a continuation of a childhood problem, other structural lesions or trauma, and very rarely idiopathic GHD.[49]

Adults with GHD "tend to have a relative increase in fat mass and a relative decrease in muscle mass and, in many instances, decreased energy and quality of life".[49]

Diagnosis of GH deficiency involves a multiple-step diagnostic process, usually culminating in GH stimulation tests to see if the patient's pituitary gland will release a pulse of GH when provoked by various stimuli.

Psychological effects edit

Quality of life edit

Several studies, primarily involving patients with GH deficiency, have suggested a crucial role of GH in both mental and emotional well-being and maintaining a high energy level. Adults with GH deficiency often have higher rates of depression than those without.[50] While GH replacement therapy has been proposed to treat depression as a result of GH deficiency, the long-term effects of such therapy are unknown.[50]

Cognitive function edit

GH has also been studied in the context of cognitive function, including learning and memory.[51] GH in humans appears to improve cognitive function and may be useful in the treatment of patients with cognitive impairment that is a result of GH deficiency.[51]

Medical uses edit

Replacement therapy edit

GH is used as replacement therapy in adults with GH deficiency of either childhood-onset or adult-onset (usually as a result of an acquired pituitary tumor). In these patients, benefits have variably included reduced fat mass, increased lean mass, increased bone density, improved lipid profile, reduced cardiovascular risk factors, and improved psychosocial well-being. Long acting growth hormone (LAGH) analogues are now available for treating growth hormone deficiency both in children and adults. These are once weekly injections as compared to conventional growth hormone which has to be taken as daily injections. LAGH injection 4 times a month has been found to be as safe and effective as daily growth hormone injections.[52]

Other approved uses edit

GH can be used to treat conditions that produce short stature but are not related to deficiencies in GH. However, results are not as dramatic when compared to short stature that is solely attributable to deficiency of GH. Examples of other causes of shortness often treated with GH are Turner syndrome, Growth failure secondary to chronic kidney disease in children,[53] Prader–Willi syndrome, intrauterine growth restriction, and severe idiopathic short stature. Higher ("pharmacologic") doses are required to produce significant acceleration of growth in these conditions, producing blood levels well above normal ("physiologic").[citation needed]

One version of rHGH has also been FDA approved for maintaining muscle mass in wasting due to AIDS.[54]

Off-label use edit

Off-label prescription of HGH is controversial and may be illegal.[55]

Claims for GH as an anti-aging treatment date back to 1990 when the New England Journal of Medicine published a study wherein GH was used to treat 12 men over 60.[56] At the conclusion of the study, all the men showed statistically significant increases in lean body mass and bone mineral density, while the control group did not. The authors of the study noted that these improvements were the opposite of the changes that would normally occur over a 10- to 20-year aging period. Despite the fact the authors at no time claimed that GH had reversed the aging process itself, their results were misinterpreted as indicating that GH is an effective anti-aging agent.[57][58][59] This has led to organizations such as the controversial American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine promoting the use of this hormone as an "anti-aging agent".[60]

A Stanford University School of Medicine meta-analysis of clinical studies on the subject published in early 2007 showed that the application of GH on healthy elderly patients increased muscle by about 2 kg and decreased body fat by the same amount.[57] However, these were the only positive effects from taking GH. No other critical factors were affected, such as bone density, cholesterol levels, lipid measurements, maximal oxygen consumption, or any other factor that would indicate increased fitness.[57] Researchers also did not discover any gain in muscle strength, which led them to believe that GH merely let the body store more water in the muscles rather than increase muscle growth. This would explain the increase in lean body mass.

GH has also been used experimentally to treat multiple sclerosis, to enhance weight loss in obesity, as well as in fibromyalgia, heart failure, Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, and burns. GH has also been used experimentally in patients with short bowel syndrome to lessen the requirement for intravenous total parenteral nutrition.

In 1990, the US Congress passed an omnibus crime bill, the Crime Control Act of 1990, that amended the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, that classified anabolic steroids as controlled substances and added a new section that stated that a person who "knowingly distributes, or possesses with intent to distribute, human growth hormone for any use in humans other than the treatment of a disease or other recognized medical condition, where such use has been authorized by the Secretary of Health and Human Services" has committed a felony.[61][62]

The Drug Enforcement Administration of the US Department of Justice considers off-label prescribing of HGH to be illegal, and to be a key path for illicit distribution of HGH.[55] This section has also been interpreted by some doctors, most notably[63] the authors of a commentary article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2005, as meaning that prescribing HGH off-label may be considered illegal.[64] And some articles in the popular press, such as those criticizing the pharmaceutical industry for marketing drugs for off-label use (with concern of ethics violations) have made strong statements about whether doctors can prescribe HGH off-label: "Unlike other prescription drugs, HGH may be prescribed only for specific uses. U.S. sales are limited by law to treat a rare growth defect in children and a handful of uncommon conditions like short bowel syndrome or Prader-Willi syndrome, a congenital disease that causes reduced muscle tone and a lack of hormones in sex glands."[65][66] At the same time, anti-aging clinics where doctors prescribe, administer, and sell HGH to people are big business.[65][67] In a 2012 article in Vanity Fair, when asked how HGH prescriptions far exceed the number of adult patients estimated to have HGH-deficiency, Dragos Roman, who leads a team at the FDA that reviews drugs in endocrinology, said "The F.D.A. doesn't regulate off-label uses of H.G.H. Sometimes it's used appropriately. Sometimes it's not."[67]

Side effects edit

Injection site reactions are common. More rarely, patients can experience joint swelling, joint pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, and an increased risk of diabetes.[57] In some cases, the patient can produce an immune response against GH. GH may also be a risk factor for Hodgkin's lymphoma.[68]

One survey of adults that had been treated with replacement cadaver GH (which has not been used anywhere in the world since 1985) during childhood showed a mildly increased incidence of colon cancer and prostate cancer, but linkage with the GH treatment was not established.[69]

Performance enhancement edit

The first description of the use of GH as a doping agent was Dan Duchaine's "Underground Steroid handbook" which emerged from California in 1982; it is not known where and when GH was first used this way.[70]

Athletes in many sports have used human growth hormone in order to attempt to enhance their athletic performance. Some recent studies have not been able to support claims that human growth hormone can improve the athletic performance of professional male athletes.[71][72][73] Many athletic societies ban the use of GH and will issue sanctions against athletes who are caught using it. However, because GH is a potent endogenous protein, it is very difficult to detect GH doping. In the United States, GH is legally available only by prescription from a medical doctor.

Dietary supplements edit

To capitalize on the idea that GH might be useful to combat aging, companies selling dietary supplements have websites selling products linked to GH in the advertising text, with medical-sounding names described as "HGH Releasers". Typical ingredients include amino acids, minerals, vitamins, and/or herbal extracts, the combination of which are described as causing the body to make more GH with corresponding beneficial effects. In the United States, because these products are marketed as dietary supplements, it is illegal for them to contain GH, which is a drug. Also, under United States law, products sold as dietary supplements cannot have claims that the supplement treats or prevents any disease or condition, and the advertising material must contain a statement that the health claims are not approved by the FDA. The FTC and the FDA do enforce the law when they become aware of violations.[74]

Agricultural use edit

In the United States, it is legal to give a bovine GH to dairy cows to increase milk production, and is legal to use GH in raising cows for beef; see article on Bovine somatotropin, cattle feeding, dairy farming and the beef hormone controversy.

The use of GH in poultry farming is illegal in the United States.[75][76] Similarly, no chicken meat for sale in Australia is administered hormones.[77]

Several companies have attempted to have a version of GH for use in pigs (porcine somatotropin) approved by the FDA but all applications have been withdrawn.[78]

Drug development history edit

Genentech pioneered the use of recombinant human growth hormone for human therapy, which was approved by the FDA in 1985.

Prior to its production by recombinant DNA technology, growth hormone used to treat deficiencies was extracted from the pituitary glands of cadavers. Attempts to create a wholly synthetic HGH failed. Limited supplies of HGH resulted in the restriction of HGH therapy to the treatment of idiopathic short stature.[79] Very limited clinical studies of growth hormone derived from an Old World monkey, the rhesus macaque, were conducted by John C. Beck and colleagues in Montreal, in the late 1950s.[80] The study published in 1957, which was conducted on "a 13-year-old male with well-documented hypopituitarism secondary to a crainiophyaryngioma," found that: "Human and monkey growth hormone resulted in a significant enhancement of nitrogen storage ... (and) there was a retention of potassium, phosphorus, calcium, and sodium. ... There was a gain in body weight during both periods. ... There was a significant increase in urinary excretion of aldosterone during both periods of administration of growth hormone. This was most marked with the human growth hormone. ... Impairment of the glucose tolerance curve was evident after 10 days of administration of the human growth hormone. No change in glucose tolerance was demonstrable on the fifth day of administration of monkey growth hormone."[80] The other study, published in 1958, was conducted on six people: the same subject as the Science paper; an 18-year-old male with statural and sexual retardation and a skeletal age of between 13 and 14 years; a 15-year-old female with well-documented hypopituitarism secondary to a craniopharyngioma; a 53-year-old female with carcinoma of the breast and widespread skeletal metastases; a 68-year-old female with advanced postmenopausal osteoporosis; and a healthy 24-year-old medical student without any clinical or laboratory evidence of systemic disease.[81]

In 1985, unusual cases of Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease were found in individuals that had received cadaver-derived HGH ten to fifteen years previously. Based on the assumption that infectious prions causing the disease were transferred along with the cadaver-derived HGH, cadaver-derived HGH was removed from the market.[20]

In 1985, biosynthetic human growth hormone replaced pituitary-derived human growth hormone for therapeutic use in the U.S. and elsewhere.

As of 2005, recombinant growth hormones available in the United States (and their manufacturers) included Nutropin (Genentech), Humatrope (Lilly), Genotropin (Pfizer), Norditropin (Novo), and Saizen (Merck Serono). In 2006, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a version of rHGH called Omnitrope (Sandoz).[82] A sustained-release form of growth hormone, Nutropin Depot (Genentech and Alkermes) was approved by the FDA in 1999, allowing for fewer injections (every 2 or 4 weeks instead of daily); however, the product was discontinued by Genentech/Alkermes in 2004 for financial reasons (Nutropin Depot required significantly more resources to produce than the rest of the Nutropin line[83]).

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Growth hormones at Wikimedia Commons

growth, hormone, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, somatotropin, also, known, human, growth, hormone, human, form, peptide, hormone, that, stimulates, growth, cell, reproduction, cell, regeneration, humans, other, animals, thus, important, human, d. HGH redirects here For other uses see HGH disambiguation Growth hormone GH or somatotropin also known as human growth hormone hGH or HGH in its human form is a peptide hormone that stimulates growth cell reproduction and cell regeneration in humans and other animals It is thus important in human development GH also stimulates production of Insulin like growth factor 1 IGF 1 and increases the concentration of glucose and free fatty acids 1 2 It is a type of mitogen which is specific only to the receptors on certain types of cells GH is a 191 amino acid single chain polypeptide that is synthesized stored and secreted by somatotropic cells within the lateral wings of the anterior pituitary gland Growth hormone 1 pituitary Growth hormoneIdentifiersSymbolGH1NCBI gene2688HGNC4261OMIM139250RefSeqNM 022562UniProtP01241Other dataLocusChr 17 q22 q24Search forStructuresSwiss modelDomainsInterPro Growth hormone 2 placental IdentifiersSymbolGH2NCBI gene2689HGNC4262OMIM139240RefSeqNM 002059UniProtP01242Other dataLocusChr 17 q22 q24Search forStructuresSwiss modelDomainsInterPro A recombinant form of HGH called somatropin INN is used as a prescription drug to treat children s growth disorders and adult growth hormone deficiency In the United States it is only available legally from pharmacies by prescription from a licensed health care provider In recent years in the United States some health care providers are prescribing growth hormone in the elderly to increase vitality While legal the efficacy and safety of this use for HGH has not been tested in a clinical trial Many of the functions of HGH remain unknown 3 In its role as an anabolic agent HGH has been used by competitors in sports since at least 1982 and has been banned by the IOC and NCAA Traditional urine analysis does not detect doping with HGH so the ban was not enforced until the early 2000s when blood tests that could distinguish between natural and artificial HGH were starting to be developed Blood tests conducted by WADA at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens Greece targeted primarily HGH 3 Use of the drug for performance enhancement is not currently approved by the FDA GH has been studied for use in raising livestock more efficiently in industrial agriculture and several efforts have been made to obtain governmental approval to use GH in livestock production These uses have been controversial In the United States the only FDA approved use of GH for livestock is the use of a cow specific form of GH called bovine somatotropin for increasing milk production in dairy cows Retailers are permitted to label containers of milk as produced with or without bovine somatotropin Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Biology 2 1 Gene 2 2 Structure 2 3 Regulation 2 4 Function 3 Biochemistry 4 Clinical significance 4 1 Excess 4 2 Deficiency 5 Psychological effects 5 1 Quality of life 5 2 Cognitive function 6 Medical uses 6 1 Replacement therapy 6 2 Other approved uses 6 3 Off label use 6 4 Side effects 7 Performance enhancement 8 Dietary supplements 9 Agricultural use 10 Drug development history 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksNomenclature editThe names somatotropin STH or somatotropic hormone refer to the growth hormone produced naturally in animals and extracted from carcasses Hormone extracted from human cadavers is abbreviated hGH The main growth hormone produced by recombinant DNA technology has the approved generic name INN somatropin and the brand name Humatrope 4 and is properly abbreviated rhGH in the scientific literature Since its introduction in 1992 Humatrope has been a banned sports doping agent 5 and in this context is referred to as HGH The term growth hormone has been incorrectly applied to refer to anabolic sex hormones in the European beef hormone controversy which initially restricts the use of estradiol progesterone testosterone zeranol melengestrol acetate and trenbolone acetate 6 Biology editGene edit Main articles Growth hormone 1 and Growth hormone 2 Genes for human growth hormone known as growth hormone 1 somatotropin pituitary growth hormone and growth hormone 2 placental growth hormone growth hormone variant are localized in the q22 24 region of chromosome 17 7 8 and are closely related to human chorionic somatomammotropin also known as placental lactogen genes GH human chorionic somatomammotropin and prolactin belong to a group of homologous hormones with growth promoting and lactogenic activity Structure edit The major isoform of the human growth hormone is a protein of 191 amino acids and a molecular weight of 22 124 daltons The structure includes four helices necessary for functional interaction with the GH receptor It appears that in structure GH is evolutionarily homologous to prolactin and chorionic somatomammotropin Despite marked structural similarities between growth hormone from different species only human and Old World monkey growth hormones have significant effects on the human growth hormone receptor 9 Several molecular isoforms of GH exist in the pituitary gland and are released to blood In particular a variant of approximately 20 kDa originated by an alternative splicing is present in a rather constant 1 9 ratio 10 while recently an additional variant of 23 24 kDa has also been reported in post exercise states at higher proportions 11 This variant has not been identified but it has been suggested to coincide with a 22 kDa glycosylated variant of 23 kDa identified in the pituitary gland 12 Furthermore these variants circulate partially bound to a protein growth hormone binding protein GHBP which is the truncated part of the growth hormone receptor and an acid labile subunit ALS Regulation edit See also Hypothalamic pituitary somatotropic axis nbsp Flowchart showing hormonal regulation of growth Secretion of growth hormone GH in the pituitary is regulated by the neurosecretory nuclei of the hypothalamus These cells release the peptides growth hormone releasing hormone GHRH or somatocrinin and growth hormone inhibiting hormone GHIH or somatostatin into the hypophyseal portal venous blood surrounding the pituitary GH release in the pituitary is primarily determined by the balance of these two peptides which in turn is affected by many physiological stimulators e g exercise nutrition sleep and inhibitors e g free fatty acids of GH secretion 13 Somatotropic cells in the anterior pituitary gland then synthesize and secrete GH in a pulsatile manner in response to these stimuli by the hypothalamus The largest and most predictable of these GH peaks occurs about an hour after onset of sleep with plasma levels of 13 to 72 ng mL 14 Maximal secretion of GH may occur within minutes of the onset of slow wave SW sleep stage III or IV 15 Otherwise there is wide variation between days and individuals Nearly fifty percent of GH secretion occurs during the third and fourth NREM sleep stages 16 Surges of secretion during the day occur at 3 to 5 hour intervals 3 The plasma concentration of GH during these peaks may range from 5 to even 45 ng mL 17 Between the peaks basal GH levels are low usually less than 5 ng mL for most of the day and night 14 Additional analysis of the pulsatile profile of GH described in all cases less than 1 ng ml for basal levels while maximum peaks were situated around 10 20 ng mL 18 19 A number of factors are known to affect GH secretion such as age sex diet exercise stress and other hormones 3 Young adolescents secrete GH at the rate of about 700 mg day while healthy adults secrete GH at the rate of about 400 mg day 20 Sleep deprivation generally suppresses GH release particularly after early adulthood 21 Stimulators quantify of growth hormone GH secretion include Peptide hormones GHRH somatocrinin through binding to the growth hormone releasing hormone receptor GHRHR 22 Ghrelin through binding to growth hormone secretagogue receptors GHSR 23 Sex hormones 24 Increased androgen secretion during puberty in males from testes and in females from adrenal cortex Testosterone and DHEA Estrogen Clonidine and L DOPA by stimulating GHRH release 25 a4b2 nicotinic agonists including nicotine which also act synergistically with clonidine 26 27 28 Hypoglycemia arginine 29 pramipexole 30 and propranolol by inhibiting somatostatin release 25 Deep sleep 31 Glucagon Niacin as nicotinic acid vitamin B3 32 Fasting 33 Insulin 34 Vigorous exercise 35 Inhibitors quantify of GH secretion include GHIH somatostatin from the periventricular nucleus 36 circulating concentrations of GH and IGF 1 negative feedback on the pituitary and hypothalamus 3 Hyperglycemia 25 Glucocorticoids 37 Dihydrotestosterone Phenothiazines In addition to control by endogenous and stimulus processes a number of foreign compounds xenobiotics such as drugs and endocrine disruptors are known to influence GH secretion and function 38 Function edit nbsp Main pathways in endocrine regulation of growth Effects of growth hormone on the tissues of the body can generally be described as anabolic building up Like most other peptide hormones GH acts by interacting with a specific receptor on the surface of cells Increased height during childhood is the most widely known effect of GH Height appears to be stimulated by at least two mechanisms Because polypeptide hormones are not fat soluble they cannot penetrate cell membranes Thus GH exerts some of its effects by binding to receptors on target cells where it activates the MAPK ERK pathway 39 Through this mechanism GH directly stimulates division and multiplication of chondrocytes of cartilage GH also stimulates through the JAK STAT signaling pathway 39 the production of insulin like growth factor 1 IGF 1 formerly known as somatomedin C a hormone homologous to proinsulin 40 The liver is a major target organ of GH for this process and is the principal site of IGF 1 production IGF 1 has growth stimulating effects on a wide variety of tissues Additional IGF 1 is generated within target tissues making it what appears to be both an endocrine and an autocrine paracrine hormone IGF 1 also has stimulatory effects on osteoblast and chondrocyte activity to promote bone growth In addition to increasing height in children and adolescents growth hormone has many other effects on the body Increases calcium retention 41 citation needed and strengthens and increases the mineralization of bone Increases muscle mass through sarcomere hypertrophy Promotes lipolysis Increases protein synthesis Stimulates the growth of all internal organs excluding the brain Plays a role in homeostasis Reduces liver uptake of glucose Promotes gluconeogenesis in the liver 42 Contributes to the maintenance and function of pancreatic islets Stimulates the immune system Increases deiodination of T4 to T3 43 Induces insulin resistance 44 Biochemistry editGH has a short biological half life of about 10 to 20 minutes 45 46 Clinical significance editExcess edit The most common disease of GH excess is a pituitary tumor composed of somatotroph cells of the anterior pituitary These somatotroph adenomas are benign and grow slowly gradually producing more and more GH For years the principal clinical problems are those of GH excess Eventually the adenoma may become large enough to cause headaches impair vision by pressure on the optic nerves or cause deficiency of other pituitary hormones by displacement Prolonged GH excess thickens the bones of the jaw fingers and toes resulting in heaviness of the jaw and increased size of digits referred to as acromegaly Accompanying problems can include sweating pressure on nerves e g carpal tunnel syndrome muscle weakness excess sex hormone binding globulin SHBG insulin resistance or even a rare form of type 2 diabetes and reduced sexual function GH secreting tumors are typically recognized in the fifth decade of life It is extremely rare for such a tumor to occur in childhood but when it does the excessive GH can cause excessive growth traditionally referred to as pituitary gigantism Surgical removal is the usual treatment for GH producing tumors In some circumstances focused radiation or a GH antagonist such as pegvisomant may be employed to shrink the tumor or block function Other drugs like octreotide somatostatin agonist and bromocriptine dopamine agonist can be used to block GH secretion because both somatostatin and dopamine negatively inhibit GHRH mediated GH release from the anterior pituitary 47 Deficiency edit Main article Growth hormone deficiency The effects of growth hormone GH deficiency vary depending on the age at which they occur Alterations in somatomedin can result in growth hormone deficiency with two known mechanisms failure of tissues to respond to somatomedin or failure of the liver to produce somatomedin 48 Major manifestations of GH deficiency in children are growth failure the development of a short stature and delayed sexual maturity In adults somatomedin alteration contributes to increased osteoclast activity resulting in weaker bones that are more prone to pathologic fracture and osteoporosis 48 However deficiency is rare in adults with the most common cause being a pituitary adenoma 49 Other adult causes include a continuation of a childhood problem other structural lesions or trauma and very rarely idiopathic GHD 49 Adults with GHD tend to have a relative increase in fat mass and a relative decrease in muscle mass and in many instances decreased energy and quality of life 49 Diagnosis of GH deficiency involves a multiple step diagnostic process usually culminating in GH stimulation tests to see if the patient s pituitary gland will release a pulse of GH when provoked by various stimuli Psychological effects editQuality of life edit Several studies primarily involving patients with GH deficiency have suggested a crucial role of GH in both mental and emotional well being and maintaining a high energy level Adults with GH deficiency often have higher rates of depression than those without 50 While GH replacement therapy has been proposed to treat depression as a result of GH deficiency the long term effects of such therapy are unknown 50 Cognitive function edit GH has also been studied in the context of cognitive function including learning and memory 51 GH in humans appears to improve cognitive function and may be useful in the treatment of patients with cognitive impairment that is a result of GH deficiency 51 Medical uses editMain article Growth hormone therapy Replacement therapy edit GH is used as replacement therapy in adults with GH deficiency of either childhood onset or adult onset usually as a result of an acquired pituitary tumor In these patients benefits have variably included reduced fat mass increased lean mass increased bone density improved lipid profile reduced cardiovascular risk factors and improved psychosocial well being Long acting growth hormone LAGH analogues are now available for treating growth hormone deficiency both in children and adults These are once weekly injections as compared to conventional growth hormone which has to be taken as daily injections LAGH injection 4 times a month has been found to be as safe and effective as daily growth hormone injections 52 Other approved uses edit GH can be used to treat conditions that produce short stature but are not related to deficiencies in GH However results are not as dramatic when compared to short stature that is solely attributable to deficiency of GH Examples of other causes of shortness often treated with GH are Turner syndrome Growth failure secondary to chronic kidney disease in children 53 Prader Willi syndrome intrauterine growth restriction and severe idiopathic short stature Higher pharmacologic doses are required to produce significant acceleration of growth in these conditions producing blood levels well above normal physiologic citation needed One version of rHGH has also been FDA approved for maintaining muscle mass in wasting due to AIDS 54 Off label use edit Main article HGH controversies Off label prescription of HGH is controversial and may be illegal 55 Claims for GH as an anti aging treatment date back to 1990 when the New England Journal of Medicine published a study wherein GH was used to treat 12 men over 60 56 At the conclusion of the study all the men showed statistically significant increases in lean body mass and bone mineral density while the control group did not The authors of the study noted that these improvements were the opposite of the changes that would normally occur over a 10 to 20 year aging period Despite the fact the authors at no time claimed that GH had reversed the aging process itself their results were misinterpreted as indicating that GH is an effective anti aging agent 57 58 59 This has led to organizations such as the controversial American Academy of Anti Aging Medicine promoting the use of this hormone as an anti aging agent 60 A Stanford University School of Medicine meta analysis of clinical studies on the subject published in early 2007 showed that the application of GH on healthy elderly patients increased muscle by about 2 kg and decreased body fat by the same amount 57 However these were the only positive effects from taking GH No other critical factors were affected such as bone density cholesterol levels lipid measurements maximal oxygen consumption or any other factor that would indicate increased fitness 57 Researchers also did not discover any gain in muscle strength which led them to believe that GH merely let the body store more water in the muscles rather than increase muscle growth This would explain the increase in lean body mass GH has also been used experimentally to treat multiple sclerosis to enhance weight loss in obesity as well as in fibromyalgia heart failure Crohn s disease and ulcerative colitis and burns GH has also been used experimentally in patients with short bowel syndrome to lessen the requirement for intravenous total parenteral nutrition In 1990 the US Congress passed an omnibus crime bill the Crime Control Act of 1990 that amended the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act that classified anabolic steroids as controlled substances and added a new section that stated that a person who knowingly distributes or possesses with intent to distribute human growth hormone for any use in humans other than the treatment of a disease or other recognized medical condition where such use has been authorized by the Secretary of Health and Human Services has committed a felony 61 62 The Drug Enforcement Administration of the US Department of Justice considers off label prescribing of HGH to be illegal and to be a key path for illicit distribution of HGH 55 This section has also been interpreted by some doctors most notably 63 the authors of a commentary article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2005 as meaning that prescribing HGH off label may be considered illegal 64 And some articles in the popular press such as those criticizing the pharmaceutical industry for marketing drugs for off label use with concern of ethics violations have made strong statements about whether doctors can prescribe HGH off label Unlike other prescription drugs HGH may be prescribed only for specific uses U S sales are limited by law to treat a rare growth defect in children and a handful of uncommon conditions like short bowel syndrome or Prader Willi syndrome a congenital disease that causes reduced muscle tone and a lack of hormones in sex glands 65 66 At the same time anti aging clinics where doctors prescribe administer and sell HGH to people are big business 65 67 In a 2012 article in Vanity Fair when asked how HGH prescriptions far exceed the number of adult patients estimated to have HGH deficiency Dragos Roman who leads a team at the FDA that reviews drugs in endocrinology said The F D A doesn t regulate off label uses of H G H Sometimes it s used appropriately Sometimes it s not 67 Side effects edit Injection site reactions are common More rarely patients can experience joint swelling joint pain carpal tunnel syndrome and an increased risk of diabetes 57 In some cases the patient can produce an immune response against GH GH may also be a risk factor for Hodgkin s lymphoma 68 One survey of adults that had been treated with replacement cadaver GH which has not been used anywhere in the world since 1985 during childhood showed a mildly increased incidence of colon cancer and prostate cancer but linkage with the GH treatment was not established 69 Performance enhancement editMain article Growth hormone in sports The first description of the use of GH as a doping agent was Dan Duchaine s Underground Steroid handbook which emerged from California in 1982 it is not known where and when GH was first used this way 70 Athletes in many sports have used human growth hormone in order to attempt to enhance their athletic performance Some recent studies have not been able to support claims that human growth hormone can improve the athletic performance of professional male athletes 71 72 73 Many athletic societies ban the use of GH and will issue sanctions against athletes who are caught using it However because GH is a potent endogenous protein it is very difficult to detect GH doping In the United States GH is legally available only by prescription from a medical doctor Dietary supplements editTo capitalize on the idea that GH might be useful to combat aging companies selling dietary supplements have websites selling products linked to GH in the advertising text with medical sounding names described as HGH Releasers Typical ingredients include amino acids minerals vitamins and or herbal extracts the combination of which are described as causing the body to make more GH with corresponding beneficial effects In the United States because these products are marketed as dietary supplements it is illegal for them to contain GH which is a drug Also under United States law products sold as dietary supplements cannot have claims that the supplement treats or prevents any disease or condition and the advertising material must contain a statement that the health claims are not approved by the FDA The FTC and the FDA do enforce the law when they become aware of violations 74 Agricultural use editIn the United States it is legal to give a bovine GH to dairy cows to increase milk production and is legal to use GH in raising cows for beef see article on Bovine somatotropin cattle feeding dairy farming and the beef hormone controversy The use of GH in poultry farming is illegal in the United States 75 76 Similarly no chicken meat for sale in Australia is administered hormones 77 Several companies have attempted to have a version of GH for use in pigs porcine somatotropin approved by the FDA but all applications have been withdrawn 78 Drug development history editMain article Growth hormone treatment History Genentech pioneered the use of recombinant human growth hormone for human therapy which was approved by the FDA in 1985 Prior to its production by recombinant DNA technology growth hormone used to treat deficiencies was extracted from the pituitary glands of cadavers Attempts to create a wholly synthetic HGH failed Limited supplies of HGH resulted in the restriction of HGH therapy to the treatment of idiopathic short stature 79 Very limited clinical studies of growth hormone derived from an Old World monkey the rhesus macaque were conducted by John C Beck and colleagues in Montreal in the late 1950s 80 The study published in 1957 which was conducted on a 13 year old male with well documented hypopituitarism secondary to a crainiophyaryngioma found that Human and monkey growth hormone resulted in a significant enhancement of nitrogen storage and there was a retention of potassium phosphorus calcium and sodium There was a gain in body weight during both periods There was a significant increase in urinary excretion of aldosterone during both periods of administration of growth hormone This was most marked with the human growth hormone Impairment of the glucose tolerance curve was evident after 10 days of administration of the human growth hormone No change in glucose tolerance was demonstrable on the fifth day of administration of monkey growth hormone 80 The other study published in 1958 was conducted on six people the same subject as the Science paper an 18 year old male with statural and sexual retardation and a skeletal age of between 13 and 14 years a 15 year old female with well documented hypopituitarism secondary to a craniopharyngioma a 53 year old female with carcinoma of the breast and widespread skeletal metastases a 68 year old female with advanced postmenopausal osteoporosis and a healthy 24 year old medical student without any clinical or laboratory evidence of systemic disease 81 In 1985 unusual cases of Creutzfeldt Jakob disease were found in individuals that had received cadaver derived HGH ten to fifteen years previously Based on the assumption that infectious prions causing the disease were transferred along with the cadaver derived HGH cadaver derived HGH was removed from the market 20 In 1985 biosynthetic human growth hormone replaced pituitary derived human growth hormone for therapeutic use in the U S and elsewhere As of 2005 recombinant growth hormones available in the United States and their manufacturers included Nutropin Genentech Humatrope Lilly Genotropin Pfizer Norditropin Novo and Saizen Merck Serono In 2006 the U S Food and Drug Administration FDA approved a version of rHGH called Omnitrope Sandoz 82 A sustained release form of growth hormone Nutropin Depot Genentech and Alkermes was approved by the FDA in 1999 allowing for fewer injections every 2 or 4 weeks instead of daily however the product was discontinued by Genentech Alkermes in 2004 for financial reasons Nutropin Depot required significantly more resources to produce than the rest of the Nutropin line 83 See also 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Thomas J Clewes A Hokins MT Guzder R Ibrahim H Durham B Vora JP Fraser WD 2003 06 01 Effects of Growth Hormone Replacement on Parathyroid Hormone Sensitivity and Bone Mineral Metabolism The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology amp Metabolism 88 6 2860 2868 doi 10 1210 jc 2002 021787 PMID 12788900 King MW 2006 Structure and Function of Hormones Growth Hormone Indiana State University Archived from the original on 2007 12 06 Retrieved 2008 01 16 T F Davies ed A Case Based Guide to Clinical Endocrinology 2008 pag 16 Sharma Rita Kopchick John J Puri Vishwajeet Sharma Vishva M 2020 12 01 Effect of Growth Hormone on Insulin Signaling Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 518 111038 doi 10 1016 j mce 2020 111038 ISSN 0303 7207 PMC 7606590 PMID 32966863 Artwelle G Wislon FG 2008 New Human Growth Hormone Research Nova Publishers pp 12 ISBN 978 1 60456 438 9 Norditropin somatropin injection for subcutaneous use PDF Novo Nordisk A S U S Food and Drug Administration Varlamov EV McCartney S Fleseriu M April 2019 Functioning Pituitary Adenomas Current Treatment Options and Emerging Medical Therapies European Endocrinology 15 1 30 40 doi 10 17925 EE 2019 15 1 30 PMC 6587904 PMID 31244908 a b Ignatavicius D Workman L 2015 Medical Surgical Nursing Patient Centered Collaborative Care 8 ed Saunders p 1267 ISBN 978 1455772551 a b c Molitch ME Clemmons DR Malozowski S Merriam GR Shalet SM Vance ML Stephens PA May 2006 Evaluation and treatment of adult growth hormone deficiency an Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism 91 5 1621 34 doi 10 1210 jc 2005 2227 PMID 16636129 a b Prodam F Caputo M Belcastro S Garbaccio V Zavattaro M Sama MT Bellone S Pagano L Bona G Aimaretti G December 2012 Quality of life mood disturbances and psychological parameters in adult patients with GH deficiency Panminerva Medica 54 4 323 31 PMID 23123585 a b Nyberg F Hallberg M June 2013 Growth hormone and cognitive function Nature Reviews Endocrinology 9 6 357 65 doi 10 1038 nrendo 2013 78 PMID 23629538 S2CID 33876345 Dutta D Mahajan K Kumar M Sharma M Feb 2022 Efficacy and safety of long acting growth hormone in adult growth hormone deficiency A systematic review and meta analysis Diabetes Metab Syndr 16 2 102421 doi 10 1016 j dsx 2022 102421 PMID 35158212 S2CID 246689650 UpToDate www uptodate com Retrieved 2022 12 08 Gilden D January 1995 Human growth hormone available for AIDS wasting GMHC Treatment Issues 9 1 9 11 PMID 11367383 a b DEA US Department of Justice DEA Genotropin Archived 2015 04 04 at the Wayback Machine Quote The illicit distribution of hGH occurs as the result of physicians illegally prescribing it for off label uses and for the treatment of FDA approved medical conditions without examination and supervision Rudman D Feller AG Nagraj HS Gergans GA Lalitha PY Goldberg AF Schlenker RA Cohn L Rudman IW Mattson DE July 1990 Effects of human growth hormone in men over 60 years old The New England Journal of Medicine 323 1 1 6 doi 10 1056 NEJM199007053230101 PMID 2355952 a b c d Liu H Bravata DM Olkin I Nayak S Roberts B Garber AM Hoffman AR January 2007 Systematic review the safety and efficacy of growth hormone in the healthy elderly Annals of Internal Medicine 146 2 104 15 doi 10 7326 0003 4819 146 2 200701160 00005 PMID 17227934 S2CID 27279712 No proof that growth hormone therapy makes you live longer study finds PhysOrg com 2007 01 16 Retrieved 2009 03 16 Kreidler M June 5 2016 Growth Hormone Schemes and Scams Quackwatch Kuczynski A 1998 04 12 Anti Aging Potion or Poison New York Times Mannfred A Hollinger Introduction to Pharmacology Third Edition CRC Press 2002 ISBN 9780415280341 p 376 21 U S Code 333 Penalties LII Legal Information Institute Barclay L Lie D October 28 2005 Growth Hormone Deemed Illegal for Off Label Antiaging Use Medscape Perls TT Reisman NR Olshansky SJ October 2005 Provision or distribution of growth hormone for antiaging clinical and legal issues JAMA 294 16 2086 90 doi 10 1001 jama 294 16 2086 PMID 16249424 a b Caruso D Donn J December 21 2012 Big Pharma Cashes in on HGH Abuse AP Impact Associated Press Archived from the original on August 12 2014 Retrieved August 10 2014 Edwards J March 20 2006 Bad Medicine BrandWeek Archived from the original on 28 March 2006 a b Zeman N March 2012 Hollywood s Vial Bodies Vanity Fair Freedman RJ Malkovska V LeRoith D Collins MT October 2005 Hodgkin lymphoma in temporal association with growth hormone replacement Endocrine Journal 52 5 571 5 doi 10 1507 endocrj 52 571 PMID 16284435 Swerdlow AJ Higgins CD Adlard P Preece MA July 2002 Risk of cancer in patients treated with human pituitary growth hormone in the UK 1959 85 a cohort study Lancet 360 9329 273 7 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 02 09519 3 PMID 12147369 S2CID 16216532 Holt RI Erotokritou Mulligan I Sonksen PH August 2009 The history of doping and growth hormone abuse in sport Growth Hormone amp IGF Research 19 4 320 6 doi 10 1016 j ghir 2009 04 009 PMID 19467612 Liu H Bravata DM Olkin I Friedlander A Liu V Roberts B Bendavid E Saynina O Salpeter SR Garber AM Hoffman AR May 2008 Systematic review the effects of growth hormone on athletic performance Annals of Internal Medicine 148 10 747 58 doi 10 7326 0003 4819 148 10 200805200 00215 PMID 18347346 Randall T 2008 03 17 Athletes Don t Benefit From Human Growth Hormone Study Finds Bloomberg Retrieved 2011 08 28 Gaffney G 2008 03 17 Steroid Nation Review from Stanford says HGH no benefit as PED Steroid Nation Retrieved 2011 08 28 Singleton ER 2010 06 04 Atlas Operations Inc Warning Letter U S Food and Drug Administration Retrieved 2011 08 28 Chicken from Farm to Table USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service Fsis usda gov 2011 04 06 Archived from the original on 2011 09 03 Retrieved 2011 08 26 Poultry Industry Frequently Asked Questions U S Poultry amp Egg Association Retrieved June 21 2012 Hormones Australian Chicken Meat Federation Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 20 June 2016 Center for Veterinary Medicine Master PDF www fda gov 2011 04 06 Retrieved 2011 08 28 Maybe NG 1984 Direct expression of human growth in Escherichia coli with the lipoprotein promoter In Bollon AP ed Recombinant DNA products insulin interferon and growth hormone Boca Raton CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 5542 4 a b Beck JC Mcgarry EE Dyrenfurth I Venning EH May 1957 Metabolic effects of human and monkey growth hormone in man Science 125 3253 884 5 Bibcode 1957Sci 125 884B doi 10 1126 science 125 3253 884 PMID 13421688 Beck JC McGARRY EE Dyrenfurth I Venning EH November 1958 The metabolic effects of human and monkey growth hormone in man Annals of Internal Medicine 49 5 1090 105 doi 10 7326 0003 4819 49 5 1090 PMID 13595475 FDA Response to three Citizen Petitions against biosimilars PDF FDA 30 May 2006 retrieved 23 November 2015 In 2023 the FDA approved a different sustained release form of growth hormone Sogroya somapacitan beco Novo for both pediatric patients 2 5 years and older and adult patients whom have growth failure due to inadequate secretion of endogenous growth hormone rHGH Previously the human growth hormone analog had only been approved for adult patients with growth hormone deficiency AGHD Genentech and Alkermes Announce Decision to Discontinue Commercialization of Nutropin Depot Press Release Business Wire 2004 06 01 Retrieved 2011 08 28 External links edit nbsp Media related to Growth hormones at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Growth hormone amp oldid 1222383475, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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