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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 59, No. 4 790-793
doi:10.1210/jcem-59-4-790
Copyright © 1984 by the Endocrine Society.
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Low Plasma Norepinephrine Responses to Acute Hypoglycemia in Children with Isolated Growth Hormone Deficiency

MARY L. VOORHESS and MARGARET H. MACGILLIVRAY

Department of Pediatrics, State University of New York at Buffalo School of Medicine, and the Children's Hospital of Buffalo Buffalo, New York 14222

Address requests for reprints to: Mary L. Voorhess, M.D., Buffalo Children's Hospital, 219 Bryant Street, Buffalo, New York 14222.

Norepinephrine (NE) is a neurotransmitter of the sympathetic nervous system which is important in GH secretion. It also is a counterregulatory hormone which is released in response to insulin hypoglycemia. We measured the plasma NE, epinephrine, GH, and cortisol responses to insulininduced hypoglycemia in 29 short healthy children. The 8 patients (5 males and 3 females) which had isolated GH deficiency had no plasma NE response to insulin hypoglycemia, whereas mean plasma NE increased 2-fold in the 21 GH-sufficient children. Plasma epinephrine concentrations increased in both groups, but were lower in the GH-deficient patients. While these findings do not permit us to determine whether the reduced plasma catecholamine responses to acute hypoglycemia are the cause, the consequence, or unrelated to the GH deficiency, we speculate that there is a relationship between the NE and GH deficiencies.

Received May 12, 1984.




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Copyright © 1984 by The Endocrine Society