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It has been ten years since the National Hormone and Pituitary
Program (then called the National Pituitary Agency) sponsored a
symposium on human growth hormone (hGH). Numerous advances have
occurred during this period. This book does not attempt to
summarize past achievements. Rather, it deals with the contemporary
issues in hGH research. A discussion of the present state of the
art, of necessity, includes a review of the past. Some of the
topics herein discussed include the following: 1. Growth hormone
releasing factor (GRF). In 1973, the growth hormone inhibitory
factor (somatostatin) had recently been discovered. The search for
a releasing factor in humans led to its discovery not in the
pituitary but in a pancreatic tumor that secreted growth hormone.
The advances are discussed in this book. The current hope is that
GRF will eventually become an effective therapeutic agent for
idiopathic hypopituitarism in childhood and adolescence. 2.
Biosynthesis of hGR by recombinant DNA technology. Current advances
are discussed. Although hGH is not yet an approved drug, it will
eventually become one. This will broaden our horizons in terms of
hGH effectiveness in disorders other than hypopituitary dwarfism.
The current experience with this type of hGH in both the Vnited
States and Europe is reviewed by several authors.
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