follicle-stimulating hormone, glucagon, gibberellic acid, gastrin, gonadotrophin, growth hormone or somatotrophin, insulin, interstitial-cell-stimulating hormone or luteinizing hormone, juvenile hormone, lactogenic hormone, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, luteotrophin or prolactin, noradrenaline, oestradi...
Antagonists of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) given before whole body radiation lead to modulation of radiation response and organ-specific changes in the expression of angiogenesis. J Radiat Oncol. 2012; 1 (4):389–396.Abdel-Wahab M, Schally AV, Rick FG, Szalontay L, Block NL, ...
hormone. Factors influencing release of hGH include exercise, stress, growth-hormone releasing hormone and sleep (Tokish et al., 2004;Holt & Sönksen, 2008). The half-life of growth hormone is about thirteen minutes. Recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH) is administered intermittently via ...
Growth hormone (GH) secretion, either spontaneous or evoked by provocative stimuli, is markedly blunted in obesity. In fact obese patients display, compare... M Scacchi,AI Pincelli,F Cavagnini - 《Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord》 被引量: 615发表: 1999年 Growth hormone in obesity Growth horm...
In two large European studies of growth hormone use in critically ill adults, patients treated with growth hormone had a 1.9- to 2.4-fold relative risk of mortality, mostly due to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, shock, or uncontrolled infection. Growth hormone-treated patients also had ...
Finally , reduced release of hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), due to uraemia-r elated inhibitory factors such as angiotensin II (ANGII) and steroid treatment, might result in decreased circulating levels of bioactive luteinizing hormone (LH), hypogonadism and reduced ...
Hormone pathways also converge in the regulation of common targets. Interestingly, however, transcriptomic analysis using GA, IAA, and BRs has suggested that the exogenous applica- tion of each hormone regulates a set of specific target genes independently (Nemhauser et al., 2006). This finding ...
Growth hormone (GH) is a key modulator of growth and GH over-secretion can lead to gigantism. One form is X-linked acrogigantism (X-LAG), in which infants develop GH-secreting pituitary tumors over-expressing the orphan G-protein coupled receptor, GPR101
(Bowers et al., 1984; Cheng et al., 1993; Patchett et al., 1995). Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), which promotesGH secretionfrom GH-secreting cells in theanterior pituitary, acts on theGHRH receptorto increase intracellularcAMP, which serves as a second messenger (Akman et...
The growth hormone is distributed is through the hypothalamus with its somatotropin-releasing factor (SRF also regulates GHRH Growth hormone-releasing hormone, GRF, Growth hormone releasing hormone) and somatostatin. Most of the somatotropin is produced during sleep and especially during adolescence. The...